Monthly Archives: May 2024

More Trivial Drifting

My last post was, from one point of view, a perfect post. When I finished, it had exactly 333 words. I love it when that happens. That was why I didn’t add anything to tell you what the photos were, and why I removed the captions from them.

OK, from another point of view, it’s not perfect and I am displaying a worrying tendency towards terminal eccentricity. Or, if you believe in that sort of thing, it’s the number of the economy-sized beast.

At the time I finished it and noticed the 333 it also occurred to me that it would make a good subject for the next post. Or “this post” as it now is.

I was going to say that the last post was like a bubble floating in the sky, shimmering with iridescent colours in the spring sunshine, but add one more thing and POP! the bubble is gone forever. Such is the perfection of a 333 word blog post.

Guinea fowl – good guards – they warn of intruders and foxes. In France they are farmed for food but in UK they are not so popular.

Or Antarctica. I cringe every time Joanna Lumley‘s voice comes on TV advertising those cruises where you can go and plant your carbon footprint on the crisp, clean continent. I’m always surprised by celebrities that promote one thing (like animal rights in her case) but are still happy to take money to promote the cause of global warming.

She once stood in a cage outside Parliament to show the life of a battery hen. I wrote to the paper that ran the story asking if they could get her to pose for the equivalent life of a free range hen – ankle deep in freezing mud on a cold November day. They didn’t even reply . . .

Goose and Goslings. Traditional Christmas bird before turkey became popular.

Today’s pictures show the lives of free range poultry on the farm. The cockerel in the top picture was taken by a fox. The guinea fowl were made homeless when their roosting trees were cut down by the farmer wanting to clear an area to apply for planning permission and eventually all taken by foxes or run over (they have no road sense) and at least one goose died after a savage attack by a bullying gander. Not saying they would have been better in cages, just that life on the range can be unpleasant too.

I’ve added the culinary notes to remind you that farmers don’t keep pets.

 

 

 

The Trivia of Life

Julia rang this morning, the first time I have heard her voice for a fortnight. I could have spoken to her on the phone, but we decided it would cost too much and I can’t go on Whatsapp because it keeps telling me to go into my Google account, and that gets complicated as I can’t remember any passwords, or even the email address I used to set it up. It got very messy last time I used Google and I said, like Poe’s Raven, “Nevermore!”

It was nice to hear from her and nice to know that she had landed safely, though later than expected. She will be home tomorrow after spending the night in Norwich. I would be happy to go down and pick her up but she has decided it would be too much for me. I hate it when people decide things will be too much for me. It will be an endurance test, but I am still capable of driving to Norwich and back. Still, it’s nice she thinks of my welfare, even if she has mentally consigned me to the scrapheap of life.

I have a new card on the way from the Anti-coagulant Service. It is a cheaply produced yellow card to let paramedics know why, if they are called out to you in an emergency, you are bleeding so profusely. Most of the lettering came off soon after I got it after Julia washed my wallet recently most of the erst disappeared. There is only one complete word left (two if you count NHS) plus  farin and ibril. I’ll leave those last two for those of you who like word puzzles.

In my wallet I had several other cards, including several that are quite cheaply produced, and none of them has suffered so badly from wear and washing. The irony is that the anti-coagulant card is the only one that might save my life and it is the only one that has been rendered useless.

 

Betjeman, Larkin and Me

So many things to write about, but I’ve done most of them to death.

Julia is having a good time and should be back in UK tomorrow. This is good as it will be nice to see her again, but it is bad as it involves a day of housework tomorrow. I’ve mostly caught up but I really ought to make it look better than it was before she went. At the moment it just looks as if it’s been tidied in a hurry and everything has been moved round.

Today’s soup was good and has all gone now. I involved more onion than usual and about a foot of celery.

Wingfield Manor – tower

I bought a helping hand from Amazon. It’s getting harder to pick stuff up and I should have got one months ago, maybe years.

Today I did some complicated things, and neglected to do some of the simpler things. I really need to make myself a list as there are things I need to do now so that they are definitely done by the autumn.

Last night I watched a programme about Philip Larkin and John Betjeman. Then I watched John Betjeman on Metroland. There’s something quite painful about Metroland. It’s partly a sense of loss, partly a realisation that even if I had tried to gain admission to it, I would not have been accepted. It is the same feeling I got from watching the earlier programme. I wouldn’t have fitted in with Larkin and Betjeman – I lack the upper class accent and the Oxford education.

A Jackdaw

Pictures are from various May outings over the years,

Today I Have Been Feeling Old

A comment of Lavinia’s on my last post sparked this one.

Julia has just visited Niagara Falls on her trip to Canada. Lavinia remarked that she had been five and had been in awe of the giant rainbow they generated. That got me thinking.

Clitheroe Castle – taken from a street where some of my family lived in 1914

My Dad had what was quite a glamorous job in the 1960s. Unlike me, he was an ambitious man and we moved around a lot as he went from job to job. I started life being born in Walsall in Staffordshire. It is now in the West Midlands. We moved from there before I was old enough to remember it but I remember York, Blackburn, Clitheroe, Bourne and Peterborough. I was nine when we arrived in Peterborough and was glad when we stopped moving. Even though he eventually stayed with that company until he retired, Dad always talked about moving and “going home” when he retired so we never felt settled. Mum put a stop to the “going home” plan when she pointed out that they knew very few people in Lancashire as they had all moved or died. She added that Peterborough was flat and dry, where Lancashire was damp and hilly. As she developed arthritis she also developed a liking for Peterborough’s terrain and weather.

I’m afraid I’m a bit like Dad in that respect. This house was only ever meant to be a first step on the housing ladder and for years I looked at other houses, and t moving to different towns. We never did. Of course, like Mum, I am now going back to East Anglia for the flat terrain, and to be nearer to family. The original plan was Suffolk, but when we got the chance of the bungalow in Peterborough the practicalities outweighed the charms of rural Suffolk.

Bin raiding squirrel at Clitheroe Castle.

Part of his job in 1967 was to visit Expo 67 in Montreal. He was working for  a French company and the French were very keen on Expo 67, He went to Niagara falls as part of the trip and brought back Viewmaster reels of the Falls. Do you remember them? They are one of the things that link my childhood to the Victorian era – others are disabled servicemen from WW1, who were still around in significant numbers in the early 60s in Blackburn, and the town of Blackburn itself, with cobbled streets, terraced houses and cotton mills. They were still working in those days, even though we tend to think of them being something from the 1930s. Viewmasters owe a lot more to magic lanterns than they do to Gameboys. In fact, in 1962, when we moved to Blackburn, it was only 61 years since Queen Victoria had died. I was, at that time, closer to the Victorian Age than I am now, 62 years later, to that small boy. Sorry to chop about in time, but that’s memories for you.

He saw coloured TV on that trip, though he wasn’t impressed as he had been watching it for some time before he realised it ws colour. When we got colour TV in the UK (like a lot of people, we rented our first colour TV for Christmas 1969) the colour was so bright that things like check clothing patterns and the red coats of the British soldiers in The Last of the Mohicans tended to take on a life of their own.

Bin raiding squirrel at Clitheroe Castle.

Just think. Dad, as a child wore clogs as he developed his ambition not to be poor when he grew up. Both my grandmothers worked in cotton mills, where they used to run shifts for mothers so that they could, work, go home to get the kids fed and then go back to work. One of my grandfathers had been wounded in the Great War when kicked by a horse from his gun team, the other one built his own TV for the 1953 Coronation when the local vicar ran evening classes in the village. Sorry, I know I’ve said some of this before.

I have two kids. One does something on the internet I don’t fully understand. The other has just been promoted from working in a call centre to supervising people who work in call centres. They’re both doing jobs  that didn’t exist when I was a kid and using technology that didn’t exist. The only thing they have in common with life as I know it is that they both work hard and are doing well, just like their grandfather.

I think I may just have discovered why I am feeling so old.

I really don’t know what to use as photos for this post, probably some of Clitheroe I took a few years ago.

The Pendle Witch trail

The Parsnip Lottery

As I was writing this last night, the shopping arrived. there seems to be a worldwide parsnip shortage. Most weeks they seem to be out of stock. This is getting far too much like the episode of Foyle’s War where they had the onion raffle. At least in the war we had an excuse – most of our onions, even in 1939, were imported. Some of them were even imported by French farmers using onion sellers on bikes. Somehow this has become enshrined in British memory, even though I have never seen one. I’ve also seen the onion shortage put down to a lack of Dutch imports, but can’t find a reference to this. Another source cites the Channel Islands, Bermuda and Spain. That last link is very good, with some interesting details about onions in the early part of the war.

The problem is that it has been very wet here. This is bad for many vegetables, including potatoes, carrots and potatoes. There are reasonable international sources of potatoes and carrots but most of our parsnip imports come from Spain. Guess what? They are short of parsnips in Spain because it is too dry. I was tempted use capitals and an exclamation mark there, but have decided against it. They hope that the Spanish main crop, due any time now, will alleviate the problem.

Carrot, Parsnip and Swede Soup

Meanwhile, aggravating my supply problem (as in my problem with surpluses rather than shortages) is the fact that I opened a tin of tomatoes by accident last night. I thought they were mushy peas (I was having Omega 3 fish fingers again). In a slight daze, caused by a washing up frenzy, I reached out and picked up the wrong tin.

It’s going to be tomato soup for lunch. I was planning on not having soup until tomorrow, when it was going to be roasted vegetable soup using leftover roast veg from the lot I will be doing tonight. Soup for lunch means I won’t be having eggs as planned, meaning I am now building up a surplus of eggs. With hindsight, I should have bought a pastry case instead of a quiche. I’ve never been good at making my own pastry, and with arthritic fingers   I now do not need to feel guilty about buying it in.

TESCO – Top Valley, Nottingham. A shop with no Parsnips.

Yesterday it Rained

Yes, I read a lot of low-brow books…

It was raining when I woke up yesterday, it stayed raining all day and I’m not sure when it finished. It was the sort of rain that fell without enthusiasm, resulting in a sulky teenager of a day. I didn’t enjoy it. In the afternoon I had a hospital appointment, again. It was quite short, which made it more annoying. It took me longer to travel than I spent with the anaesthetist, and I can see the hospital from my house. I actually waited longer for the appointment (which was twenty minutes late), than I spent in the consultation. And all because the hospital couldn’t be bothered to organise itself to have everything done on one day.

It’s typical NHS – the attitude that we have nothing better to do than travel to and from hospital on their whim.

To make it worse, they had horse racing on TV. It’s a subject I’m not sure about, Great stories, the Sport of Kings, heroism, endeavour and spectacle. Plus rich people playing, animal cruelty, gambling and crime. You can see why Dick Francis was able to become a best seller. My head is now crammed with information about soft going, high knee actions and bloodlines that I really don’t need.

More books

Julia just sent me some pictures of the trip to Niagara Falls with the boys. I’d like to be with the family, though I’m not unhappy on my own. I’m also not bothered about the falls. I’ve seem much nicer waterfalls in England and I didn’t need to risk my health by flying in a metal tube filled with germ-ridden strangers.

And now, I’m off to do things – pharmacy then lunch with my sister. That reminds me – I need to get vaccinated again. I really must remember as there is a time limit on it.

After that I need to do enough to make it look like I’ve been working on decluttering over the two weeks Julia has been away.

And finally . . .                                                                                                                      Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Chilwell – a Nottingham Story

My apologies. I started yesterday morning with the intention of stitching together two short articles on Chilwell and adding a few more notes to remove some of the numismatic bias. It isn’t quite as seamless as I had intended, and as an added bonus, I seem to have introduced quite a few variations into the text with unexpected changes of font, colour and boldness. I’m not sure how I have managed to do this, but I think it is now, mostly, corrected.

Further apologies if you have come from my first post of the day, as you will already know all the information contained in that first paragraph. As we get older we ramble and repeat ourselves. Well, I do.

The word Chilwell probably doesn’t mean much to people outside Nottingham. Today, what remains is known as Chetwynd Barracks, but it has been there since 1915 with a variety of identities.

The outbreak of the Great War in 1914 changed British life forever, including numismatics. Wars need three things – men, money and munitions. During the first weekend of the war men queued to join the services, oblivious to the reality of the coming war, and over a million joined up by the end of the year. Then the money changed. The August Bank Holiday was extended to stop people withdrawing gold from the banks, as it was needed by the Government to finance the war. It took just six days to pass the Currency and Bank Notes Act, 1914 and design and print new notes. When the banks reopened on Friday 7th August, stocks of £1 notes were available to replace sovereigns. Ten Shilling notes became available the following week.

At the end of the war, there was a better known consequence, as the purity of the silver coinage dropped from .925 (Sterling Silver) to .500 in 1920. 

Finally – munitions. The armies on the Western Front fired approximately 1.5 billion shells. The British share of this required them to build 170 National Factories, including 27 which specialised in filling shells with explosives. This was very different to the single shell-filling factory we had in 1914 (Woolwich Arsenal). This expansion included Shell Filling Factory Number Six at Chilwell. During the war, the factory produced over 19 million shells, using over 120,000 tons of high explosive.

It was built without much central control. Lord Chetwynd, on the instructions of Lloyd George (who was then Chancellor of the Exchequer and head of the munitions committee), used his industrial know-how to build a factory. He told the government that he would not accept any interference and went about building a factory and developing a shell-filling system. Chetwynd was an interesting character who spent his youth touring the USA, working as a deputy sheriff in Texas, a bronco buster and a cornet player, before coming back to the UK where he became a director of Vickers Armstrong and the Wolseley Motor Car Company. He was one of a number of aggressive businessmen brought into munitions production by Lloyd George and it seemed to work well as a system.

The plan of the factory was drawn up on 7 September 1915, ground was broken on 13 September. By 8 January 1916 the first shells had been filled and by 22 January a batch had been transported to Shoeburyness for test firing. They performed well and by March the factory began in full scale production. By April they were producing 7,000 shells a week. This was done using a large number of women workers. Women had been working in factories and mills for years so I’m always surprised to see it written about as if it were a new idea, but I suppose it was the idea of using large numbers of women and trusting them to do skilled jobs that was the novelty. Over 800,000 women were eventually employed making munitions.

During the war 30-40,000 restrictive Trade Union practices were suspended, about 75% of them being practices which had restricted the use of women to do certain jobs, particularly complex jobs like working machines, which were clearly beyond the comprehension of women. Strangely, a hundred years later, this still seems to be the view of many car mechanics. These restrictions were reinstated in 1919. Although women could now vote (as long as they were 30) they were no longer allowed to do complex things like work machinery. Unless that machinery was a loom or a sewing machine, which has always struck me as being quite complex.

Factory check

The 38mm brass check illustrated was used as an ID disc for factory staff. The disc bears the crowned double C device on one side and a number on the other. The device was taken from the Chetwynd family coat of arms. The reverse has the wording THE PROPERTY OF THE NATIONAL SHELL FILLING FACTORY No 6 around the edges and CHILWELL in the centre with a stamped number.

The additional stamping – THE VC FACTORY 1915 1918 – is a reference to events on the night of 1 July 1918 when eight tons of TNT exploded. There was some fear of sabotage at the time, and also a feeling that the hot weather might have contributed to the instability of the mixture. However, the official enquiry decided that the most likely cause was a relaxation of safety standards to enable higher production rates.

The explosion was heard 30 miles away, and could have been a lot worse – the works manager, Arthur Bristowe, took burning TNT from the line and prevented a further 15 tons exploding. He was awarded the Edward Medal for his actions, one of the highest civilian gallantry awards available at the time. However, 132 people were killed in the blast and around 250 more were injured. Despite this, the day shift turned up for work as usual next morning and production restarted. Within a month the factory was reported to have set a new production record. In Parliament, Frederick Kellaway MP suggested that it might be appropriate to follow foreign practice and award a decoration to the factory. This was not followed up officially, but the factory workers took matters into their own hands and many surviving discs are stamped with the VC inscription.

Factory check – this one with the VC Factory overstamp. At the end of the war Lord Chetwynd allowed the staff to keep them as a memento. 

This was one of several explosions that took place at the factory, though the previous ones had killed only three people in total. It was also only one of several notable explosions in shell factories during the war – the other main ones being at Faversham (105 fatalities in 1916) and Silvertown (73 fatalities in 1917).

In all, around 600 people were killed in munitions explosions though many others died. A report from the munitions factory at Gretna indicates that 145 people died during the war, 115 men and 30 women, many being from industrial accidents rather than explosions. Many more died after the war from long term health conditions associated with the use of dangerous chemicals. There seems to be no figure for that, but I have seen a figure of 400 people dying as a result of exposure to TNT. This used to turn the skin yellow, which is why munitions workers were often known as “Canary Girls”.

All things eventually come to an end, and as the Great War drew to a close the need for shells decreased. The National Shell Filling Factory at Chilwell closed, and the story of “The VC Factory” passed into history.

However, the army retained the site, and built a depot for the Royal Army Ordnance Corps (RAOC) on the site, responsible for supplies of weapons, armoured vehicles, ammunition, clothing, laundry, mobile baths and photography, amongst other things. Chilwell dealt with general and surplus stores, and, with the re-armament that preceded the Second World War, was redeveloped in 1937, when it became one of five Central Ordnance Depots (COD) and specialised in building armoured vehicles.

The blue enamel tank badge with the “V for Victory” motif dates from WW2.

Chilwell Tank Fund Badge. Not exactly sure what it was for but the Victory V marks it down as WW2 in date. (Just researching it now – seems it was from a fund raising effort in 1941).

At its wartime peak in WW2 Chilwell COD employed 5,000 military and 7,500 civilian personnel. Eventually, after numerous reorganisations to mirror Britain’s decreasing army, the RAOC left Chilwell in 1982, and the depot closed on 31 March 1982. This is commemorated by the final medal, which has the badge of the RAOC on one side and a “VC Factory” design on the other.

The RAOC eventually disappeared completely when it was absorbed into the newly formed Royal Logistic Corps in 1993. Chilwell became Chetwynd Barracks in 1995, named after Viscount Chetwynd, and if everything goes to plan the barracks will be sold in 2026 for redevelopment as housing.

The final medallion.

An Plan that Failed

French Marigolds

Yesterday I tried a more ambitious post. It didn’t work out, as you may have noticed. Well, it’s not there so you probably noticed an absence rather than something that didn’t work out. The theory was good – stitch together two bits I’d done for the Numismatic Society’s Facebook page, add a few extras to remove the coin bias and I’d have a post covering the history of Chilwell including the building, the explosion, a nice tank badge I have and the future plans to build houses on the site.  That, in turn, would become part of the path to producing an even better post. One of my friends used to do that. He wrote a number of books covering the Civil War, each one built on the research he’d done for his previous books.

Bee on Chives

However, it’s harder than it looks and by the time I’d finished I still wasn’t happy. As I’m not aiming for perfection I decided it was good enough. Having prepared it all in Open Office I cut and pasted, and that was where I noticed the typeface problem. I’d cut and pasted the two articles, added more words and somehow ended up with a mish-mash of fonts, font colours and bold type. I’m not sure what happened but it took a long time to get it (mostly) right.

At that point I decided to call it a day, as the photographs are, I predict, going to be difficult to get right too.

So that’s my explanation. I’m now going to finish the other post so if you are lucky, and depending how you interpret the word “lucky” this is going to be a two post day.

Photos are from May 2020.

Damselfly at Wilford

A Brief Outline of the Day to Come

It feels like a poetry day today. I have been building up to it and as I only have 17 days until the end of the month, I really need to get a move on.

The last few days have been research days and I am making progress towards (a) an article and (b) the talk for the Numismatic Society. It occurred to me last night that to finish the article I will need some photographs, so that can’t be finished until I next visit Suffolk (not sure when that will be). The talk, on the other hand needs a lot more work and I need to get a move on. Most of the work I did yesterday (plus some I must do today to complete it) went into researching what will end up as a couple of minutes in the talk. That needs photos too. He was a local man so this will include at least one picture of a house he lived in (maybe 2, but I think the rest have been demolished) and  his grave. Possibly the grave of his son-in-law too, depending on how far I spread the research.

That’s another place where I miss Julia. She wouldn’t let me spend hours sitting over a keyboard, she’s make me get up and do something, which is sometimes annoying, but also sometimes a good thing. Last night, after a day tapping away with bad posture, I felt like i was tied in knots.

When I finish this I’m going to have another cup of tea and sit in front of the TV

for a while as I revert to the old ways and make some poetry notes with a pad and a fountain pen.

My Orange Parker Pen

 

Marmalade Hoverfly

An Early Morning Phone Call and a Grumpy Reply

Hoverfly on Welsh Poppy

Hoverfly on Spanish Poppy

Monday morning.

8.36.

The telephone rings.

Any time before 9am and I immediately think it’s either an emergency or a call from a different time zone.

It turned out to be neither. It was the Urology Department. Could I go in on Monday 20th for my operation?

No, that won’t be possible.

At that point an icy one entered the conversation. Why would that be?

I explained, in the same sort of tone, that as far as I knew I didn’t have to justify myself to them.

They changed tack at that point and explained they needed the information for record keeping purposes. Probably so that when something goes wrong they can cover themselves. I have had experience of things going wrong, and recognise the signs.

Bee on Welsh Poppy

Bee on Spanish Poppy

The reason is simple. Julia won’t be back from Canada and, as the hospital always stresses, in a confrontational and aggressive manner, I won’t be allowed home without an escort in the taxi and someone at home. They agreed that this was the case.

Actually, I’m not sure they can stop you going, and I have always won my case when arguing about it before. Why should Julia take time off work just to escort me home.

I then apologised for being grumpy, but explained I’d tried to explain all this before and nobody had taken it on board. That’s always a problem with hospitals – they don’t listen.

She then reminded me that I had an appointment with the anaesthetist on Thursday and needed to keep it so we could proceed.

Poppy

I replied that I was fully aware of this and that it would have been far better, given my mobility problems, if I could have seen them last week when I was in for the rest of the assessment.

She said she didn’t work in that department.

And that’s where we left it.

It may all go smoothly, but I bet it doesn’t.

Looks like I may be off blogging for a few days w/c 27th May.

Poppy

Sorry about the uninformative captions on the last two photos. And yes, having written the title, I realise 8.36 isn’t really early, but it is for a phone call.