Another day with no more
fatalities in the pond. Thank heavens for small mercies. Regular
readers might recall that when I first mentioned my problems with my
pond I also mentioned a friend's cat who'd had an altercation with a
car. The moggie is still under the vet, and the most recent update is
hopeful.
Yesterday I was rather
disparaging about the entire concept of arky-ologee. Tonight was a
meeting of the arky-ologee club. I'd not slept well last night, and
so dozing through a dull talk wasn't an appealing option. But
(against my better judgement) I went along to the club. It
didn't start well. The chair-lady started off her welcoming speech,
and (as is her way) she rambled on somewhat. Maybe one person
in five in the audience had the good grace to shut up and listen to
her: most continued their noisy conversations.
I was about to actually
tell people to shut up when the main speaker started. Fortunately
people shut up for that. And things picked up. The talk was good. It
was ostensibly about dene holes; holes dug around Kent for mining
chalk. They were dug all over the place over the last five hundred
years, and when they were finished they weren't filled in with much
care. And so now they periodically appear when people's back gardens
fall into them.
Some dene holes are
bigger than others. Some are just a hole; others are networks of
caves. I started getting rather excited at the thought of cave
networks. Maybe investigating some of these could be a project for
over the summer.
Whilst at the arky-ologee
club I noticed that the Lenham Arts and Crafts society were
exhibiting their members' paintings on the walls of the room we met
in. All of the paintings were up for sale; none were up for less than
fifty quid, most (in all honesty) weren't as good as the
seascape I did on Monday. Perhaps I might find a local Arts and
Crafts society and see if I can't tout my paintings through them...
Dene holes are all over the place. A couple of years ago one appeared in the middle of the road outside my Parents house. It measured about 4ft x 4ft. A car nearly went down it when the road collapsed!
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