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05 July 2008 @ 04:29 pm
Wedding fun  
This is where I was yesterday, ushering people up and down the hill for Ari and Lizzie's wedding:

(photo by [info]henriksdal)

Today I've been slowly waking up, playing with a new toy (a Sony str-dg910) and am off to babysit Noah for a couple of hours this evening while Hugh and Meredith go to the cinema.
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 03:56 pm
Weekend  
Thanks for your sympathy over my facial injuries. [info]maeve_the_red has suggested that we go for a more texturally rich narrative than 'The cat didn't want to go to the vet' and I am working on something involving jaguars and a wardrobe.

Around here, it is probable that I will be believed.

Our guests thoughtfully brought a DVD of Hot Fuzz with them, and since T succumbed to a most uncharacteristic attack of man flu, along with roaring temperature, he went to bed and we watched the movie. Excellent. It's particularly odd if you spend much of your life in Wells, as I do (we drink in those pubs). Esepcially as they CGId out the Cathedral, so there is a gaping hole in the skyline.

For the record, Glastonbury Chamber of Commerce does *not* function in a similar manner to the Sandford Neighbourhood Watch Association. All I will say, and I will say it darkly, is that you can tell Simon Pegg is from round here (his mum is one of our shop neighbours).
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 03:26 pm
RIP Chris Cooper  
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
 
 
Current Mood: sad
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 01:24 pm
RIP Chris Cooper  
This just received from Chris's family. There just aren't words to express our feelings at the moment. Chris was Tim's Best Man at our wedding almost eleven years ago.

We are very sorry to have to be the bearer of sad tidings but this is to let you know that Chris Cooper aka Jolly Green Giant passed away peacefully on the afternoon of Friday 4th July 2008.

We will pass on funeral arrangements once we know them.

Many thanks for all the kind messages we have been receiving.

Barbara and John Stewart & Kate and Andy Camroux,
 
 
Current Location: home
Current Mood: sad
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 12:37 pm
Birthday Greetings  
Many Happy Returns to [info]bluehairsue!
 
 
Current Mood: busy
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 10:07 am
Pastry is as pastry does, and other tactics of avoidance  
One of the pleasures of being from home is how life is suddenly various. I am a creature of habit who enjoys changes, so long as I don't myself have to make them. I am not a natural volunteer; I like having stuff thrust upon me.

Last weekend, staying in Cambridge, I was totally cooked for, by a Marquis who clearly loves to cook and does it very well indeed. Love that. This week, staying in Henley, I have been totally the cook in the household. It makes sense, as both Helen and Mark work late most days and get home later; and I love this too. It's very different from cooking at home, though: all-new meals, mostly from recipes, in an unfamiliar kitchen.

It's regatta week in Henley, and on Thursday we took a picnic down the river. I've never catered a picnic before. Cold food far from home, with a minimal provision of comforts, condiments and fall-back positions? Hmm. So not what I do.

It did work, though, so I'm chalking that up on the repertoire: Chaz now offers Picnics. Chicken and rice salad with chickenskin crackling (the best bit: I made that up), chorizo and mushroom tart, beef rolls, raspberries with maple cream and shortcake. I forgot the olives, but that was not catastrophic.

The beef rolls were stuffed with breadcrumbs, pecorino, parsley and pine nuts: maddening as a recipe ('spread the mix on the steak', it says, but how do you spread something so entirely dry and disintegratory?) but nice as a mixture. And there was lots left yesterday, so I reinterpreted it as a tuna tart. Which was entirely easy - add tin of tuna including oil, add half a carton of creme fraiche, sloop it all together and bake in a pastry crust - and entirely cheating, because the pastry came from Waitrose.

It's not my fault, guv. Pastry is my weak point. Which makes me bleed inside, because I read once that no man can consider himself a good cook unless he is a good pastry-cook, and I'm just not. It's the rub-the-fat-into-the-flour bit that troubles me; I was never good at this, and these days it actively hurts my fingers, so I tend to avoid it. At home I let myself use the food processor, as legitimate pain-avoidance that produces a competent result, but there isn't one in this house. Hence, Waitrose. I did at least buy baking-beans and do proper blind baking, which makes me feel a little better, but still. Bought-in pastry.

I'm trying to put it down as another factor in the variety, and hence a good thing. But I'm still blushing.

Also, it's all avoidance. I spent lots of time yesterday considering how to rework a bowlful of breadcrumbs and cheese, mostly because I'm barely getting any work done. I have started three stories, and can finish none of them; I can't even think about the novel. Long walks along the river are no substitute; nor are young godlings in boats or out of them, with loud posh laughs and silly blazers.

Still, I have finally read "The Princess Bride", so that's something achieved at last; and now I'm reading Patrick Gale (with thanks to [info]la_marquise_de for both) - and see how swiftly, how deftly I turn away from the subject of the work I am not doing? It's like that in my head too. As is this whole damn long entry, chuntering on about other stuff, heaping a haystack over the needle lest it prick me again.

Ouchie.
 
 
05 July 2008 @ 09:32 am
Delicious LiveJournal Links for 7-5-2008  
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 09:34 pm
GRRRRRR  
So Obama, in his masculine entitlement wisdom, doesn't think that "mental distress" is a good reason for a late abortion.

And judging by the comments over here, there are intelligent people who see nothing wrong with that. (Don't go troll Ari's and Eric's comment section, please; they're all civilized and shit, and they get it, even if sometimes their commenters don't.)

I just, grrrrrr. I know his voting record on abortion rights is a good one, and blah blah politics, and blah blah I sure as shit ain't voting for John McCain, and blah blah I still suspect he's a better candidate than Clinton would have been, but GRRRRRRRRR.

Senator Obama, do you trust women or do you not? I'd like to know.


Update

Some facts about third-trimester abortions, because I left this in the comment thread at EoTAW and what the hell, I should post it here too.

Third-trimester abortions are exceedingly rare (1% of all abortions). And it’s been shown that reporting errors actually inflate the number of third-trimester abortions in one state, at least, so they may actually be rarer than that.

You can see a breakdown of abortions after the sixteenth week (i.e., four months of pregnancy--early in the *second* trimeester) here. The law, following Roe v. Wade, already requires women seeking late abortions to satisfy their physician that they have a good reason for doing so; third-trimester abortions are not “on-demand” abortions by any means. There are only two clinics in the U.S. that provide them, and those are located in Wichita, KS and Boulder, CO--so that, obviously, the vast majority of women getting a third-trimester abortion have to travel quite a long way to obtain one. One of the (few) doctors in the US who’ll perform them testified that abortions after 26 weeks are due to “maternal risk, rape, incest, psychiatric or pediatric indications” (this is an anti-abortion site I’m linking, btw, and it points out that “pediatric indications” means, not fetal abnormalities, but that the pregnant woman is a child; the implication at the link is that that's not a good reason).

Obviously it’s the “psychiatric indications” that people gloss as “mental distress.” Non-suicidal “mental distress” might include things like: being worried about the effect of another baby on the child or children one already has–perhaps existing children are poor or high-needs or disabled; worries about abuse; having been under pressure from partner or parents not to abort; being in the process of a divorce; etc.

(Or, you know, just fucking freaking out because you haven't been able to get your shit and money together early enough and now your pregnancy is quite advanced and your doctor is telling you that he can't perform an abortion any more and you have to go to Kansas or Colorado to get one and you are sixteen or thirty-five, for god's sake, who cares, and you cannot have a baby right now for whatever reason, but probably your inability to get your shit and money together are good indicators of potential problems with becoming a mommy.)

I’m going to assume that most decent people can recognize that reasons like that aren’t frivolous, and are really best left to the woman in question. Nu?
 
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 11:50 pm
Grr  
Ok, have now officially Had Enough.

For about the last eighteen months (since I had a conversation with Woman Who Lives Downstairs about how worried she was that her estranged husband was trying, with the connivance of her incidentally-muslim family, to get into her flat, including 'someone's been trying to get in through the balcony'), we've had various people popping up and saying 'can I leave a key with you, my brother / sister will be here in about an hour' or just ringing our buzzer and saying 'can you let me in, I haven't got a key'. The former, fair enough. The latter has always made me unhappy, because of the husband thing and because hello, if you have a key to her door, why don't you have a key to the main front door...?

I have now had enough: someone just buzzed and asked to be let in, at gone eleven thirty. A minute of so later, I heard our not-our-door (there's a little sort of lobby area between the stairwell and our actual, locking door; the door to that makes a distinctive noise, which is how I often surprise the cleaner and postman) and went to look only to see the same woman: she doesn't even know which bloody flat she's trying to get into. "Oh, we just got off a flight, I haven't been here since it was redecorated" and this stops you remembering which *floor* it's on...? (One flat per floor. It's not hard.)

So. Have written a nice but firm note to Woman Downstairs: "will hold keys, if you come and ask me, but am no longer going to let people in randomly, both for your safety (see: husband) and mine". Went to slip it under the door, and didn't need to go that far: another four people coming up stairs with suitcases. WTF? [sigh]

No more. This post also serves as a notice to Mike, who is, you know, in bloody bed and I hope not woken by all this: we're not doing it any more. Not even if she does keep buying us Christmas chocolates to say thank you.

(I see her quite often, on the way home from picking her little boy up from school, so I will speak to her as well, if only to make sure she gets the note. But really. Enough.)
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 11:51 pm
Dr Who Confidential  
It's amazing how watching Nicholas Briggs do the Dalek voice at a readthrough just brings this TOTAL SMILE OF GLEE across your face!
 
 
 
 
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 10:20 pm
From The Spring*, by Peter Dickinson  

 . . . Dad got a new job and the family moved south.  That June Dad and Mum took Derek off to look at a lot of roses.  They had their new garden to fill, and there was this famous collection of roses only nine miles away at Something Abbey, so they could go and see if there were ones they specially liked, and get their order in for next winter.  Mum and Dad were nuts about gardens. . . .

            The roses grew in a big walled garden, hundreds and hundreds of them, all different, with labels.  Mum and Dad stood in front of each bush in turn, cocking their heads and pursing their lips while they decided if they liked it.  They’d smell a bloom or two, and then Mum would read the label and Dad would look it up in his book to see if it was disease-resistant;  last of all Mum might write its name in her notebook and they’d give it marks, out of six, like skating-judges, and move on.  It took hours.

            After a bit Mum remembered about Derek.

            “Why don’t you go down to the house and look at the river, darling?  Don’t fall in.”

            . . . The river was better than the roses, a bit.  The lawn of the big house ran down and became its bank.  It was as wide as a road, not very deep but clear, with dark green weed streaming in the current and trout sometimes darting between. . . . He counted trout for a while, and then walking further along the river he came to a strange shallow stream which ran through the lawns, like a winding path, only water, just a few inches deep but rushing through its channel in quick ripples.  Following it up he came to a sort of hole in the ground, with a fence round it.  The hole had stone sides and was full of water.  The water came rushing up from somewhere underground, almost as though it were boiling.  It was very clear.  You could see a long way down.

            While Derek stood staring, a group of other visitors strolled up and one of them started reading from her guidebook, gabbling and missing bits out.

            ” . . . remarkable spring . . . predates all the rest of the abbey . . . no doubt why the monks settled here . . . white chalk bowl fifteen feet across and twelve feet deep . . . crystal-clear water surges out at about two hundred gallons a minute . . . always the same temperature, summer and winter . . . ”

            “Magical, don’t you think?” said another of the tourists.

            She didn’t mean it.  “Magical” was just a word to her.

            But yes, Derek thought, magical.  Where does it come from?  So close to the river, too, but it’s got nothing to do with that.  Perhaps it comes from another world.

                                                                                                                                                  

*from THE LION TAMER’S DAUGHTER AND OTHER STORIES, Delacorte, US 1997

from TOUCH AND GO, Macmillan Children’s Books, UK 1999

first published in BEWARE, BEWARE  c 1987

reproduced by permission from the author!!!

 
 
04 July 2008 @ 04:05 pm
Happy 4th of July!  
Jesse Helms is dead. God bless America.

(And if you need any reminding why being "respectful" of Helms is uncalled for, here 'tis:
Soon after the Senate vote on the Confederate flag insignia, Sen. Jesse Helms (R.-N.C.) ran into Mosely-Braun in a Capitol elevator. Helms turned to his friend, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R.-Utah), and said, "Watch me make her cry. I'm going to make her cry. I'm going to sing 'Dixie' until she cries." He then proceeded to sing the song about "the good life" during slavery to Mosely-Braun (Gannett News Service, 9/2/93; Time, 8/16/93)
Nope. Can't feel sorry for his death.
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 08:47 pm
Reading Group Report  
For some reason, this week's meeting of the reading group - that's the Graphic Novels Reading Group - was a particularly good one.

Because it was a good book, perhaps? We were talking about the first chapter of Templar AZ, a webcomic by Spike (Charlie Troutman). I find webcomics hard work - even Digger, which I adore, I'd rather read on paper - so that was an interesting exercise right there. And it's an interesting narrative, a young man waking up to a phone call from his boss, interacting with his neighbours, making the acquaintance of Templar, the city where he has come to live, so that his introduction to the place is also ours. It gradually becomes clear that the world we are seeing is not this one, not - in the first chapter, at any rate - in its scientific gadgetry or magical fantasy, but simply in its social habits: people act, dress, behave differently. Reading it reminded me of reading the early installments of Finder, trying to pick up the clues about how this world works, and what these individuals are doing in it.

Perhaps we were just the right mix of people? We just seemed to bring a stimulating variety of approaches and backgrounds to the discussion: someone who was a regular online reader of Templar AZ and was able to tell us about things that were hinted at but not spelled out in this forst chapter; someone who is a very sophisticated reader but still very new to comics, who asked the questions that made us think about conventions we interpreted automatically ("So, what's going on in these unclear speech bubbles?... How do you know it's the voice at the other end of the telephone?...").

The result was an interesting discussion about how SF indicates the difference between the world of the fiction and the real world, what it expects of the reader (and, on the whole, 'literary' fiction doesn't) and how comics have certain advantages in this respect.

Or maybe I just felt it was a good session because I got to ride my hobby horse?
Tags: ,
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 09:07 pm
All Knowledge...  
Is contained in LJ?

Can any one remember which Space Shuttle Jean was piloting when she got fried?
I really can't be mithered going upstairs and rooting through the boxes of comics to find the right issue.
I have a feeling it was Enterprise (given CC's love of Trek) but I can't remember and my Googlefu failed me.

FF
 
 
04 July 2008 @ 05:01 pm
Cat 2, Monkey 0  
We have been to the vet's twice this week. Once with Sid (small lump on lip) and Pickle (tests and more dental work), and today, with Pickle on her own.

Halfway to the vet's on visit 1, Pickle howled dolorously, thus giving Sid the idea that oh noes, OMG, kidnap, do not want, HELP! Sid expressed himself in a manner best known to IRA prisoners in the Maze. I had to open all the car windows. When we got into the surgery, he surged out of the cat carrier, wild eyed and covered in shit. Moments later, so was I and so was the vet. Cleaning Sid up took more time than examining him, for something that is probably a tick bite (minus the tick).

Pickle, OTOH, was surprisingly good at the vet's. At least, she was on Wednesday, thus lulling me into a false sense of security. This morning, I said to T: 'Can you just give me a hand with Pickle? If you open the cat carrier, I'll pop her inside.'

The next 15 seconds were like one of those panels in a comic strip, featuring a small atomic explosion and the words BLAM! POW!! and KAPPLOEY!!

T grabbed Pickle by the scruff as she was en route to the cat flap and we bundled her back into the carrier. I now have a slash across my nose and halfway across my cheek, and T has a matching version down his arm. Bleeding profusely, I drove to the vet's, where I had the first of many conversations today that went: 'Omigod! What happened to your FACE?' and 'PICKLE did that?? But she's so tiny!' ...and so on.

I now have the distinction of having received medical treatment from a vet.

The vet gave Pickle a stern look and said 'What a naughty Tortie! You shouldn't scratch your mum and dad!' Pickle gave her a look right back that said, clearly, 'FUCKOFFBITCH!'

Then, still bloody, I went to have lunch with my parents, and halfway through got a phonecall from the vet's which informed me that their blood testing machine has broken down and thus Pickle's appointment will need to be rescheduled for next Wednesday.

We are now back home and Pickle is eating her tea. I am about to greet (I hope) [info]maeve_the_red with a large Scotch and explain why I appear to have been in a knife fight.