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17 December 2024 (Tuesday) - New Taps, Ice Cream

There was talk yesterday of someone in the family moving house. And also of a combi boiler. This morning as I scoffed my toast my Facebook feed was filled with adverts for heating systems and removal companies. We are definitely being watched, aren’t we?
There was also a really nasty argument on one of the local Facebook pages. People were finding fault with the local council, and a local Green activist (who I once knew reasonably well) was doing her party no favours in the way she was carrying on.
Local politics is probably a thankless task, but in my experience the last MP (who I would never have voted for) actually replied to emails on their first sending, and replied promptly too.
Our current MP replied to me on my fourth attempt.
Independent and Green councillors still haven’t replied to emails sent a month or more ago.
The trouble with politics is that people choose a political party in much the same random way they would choose a football team and then stick with that party through thick and thin cheering everything they do and belittling everything any other party does regardless of what any of their policies are, and of what actually is going on.
 
I had an email telling me of a new puzzle geocache. I solved the puzzle in a couple of minutes and saw the thing was on the way to Pembury. I also saw from the answer-checker that a fellow hunter of Tupperware had already solved the puzzle an hour previously. I suspected that he was already flying off west-wards, and didn’t bother charging off out myself. I was right not to have done so – he’d logged First to Find before I finished my toast.
 
“er indoors TM went off to the office at quarter to nine, and the builders arrived minutes afterwards At half past ten they finally got the old tap off and announced they needed some part or other and set off to wherever you get plumbing parts from. I sat with the dogs desperately hoping they would come back. They were only gone forty minutes, but I did worry. It has to be said that the new taps went in much easier than the old ones came out, and once all was done and dusted they spent a few minutes talking about the cowboy who’d fitted the bath. I didn’t have the heart to tell them that when (thirty years ago) we wanted a new bathroom my old Dad wouldn’t hear of us spending out on a professional and he did it for us. The builders showed me several place where it was obvious he’d bodged it. But we now have a non-dripping tap, which is a result.
 
With the builders finished and off to wherever it is that builders go, I settled in front of the tell and watched a couple of episodes of Victoria” on Netflix. I can remember liking that series, so I thought I’d give it another go.
 
“er indoors TM returned from the office, and I set off to Folkestone. I was on babysitting duty, so I took favourite smallest granddaughter to the park. Having been chattering all the way to the park about going on the red slide, she had one go on it before losing interest.
We then wandered round the back streets looking at people’s Christmas decorations. Back in the day every house was blinged up at this time of year; it doesn’t seem to happen quite so much these days. We walked on to the town centre where we stopped in Will Brown’s Ice cream parlour. Littlun made great fuss of wanting pink ice cream; she had three mouthfuls before announcing that she wanted to go home.
 
With littlun deposited back with her mother I came home and tried out the new taps in the bath as I had a shower. They worked. Part of me had spent much of the day wondering if they would ever work again.
And then I watched another episode of “Downton Abbey” in which having lambasted Lady Mary for her dirty weekend in Liverpool, Grannie turned out to be in no position to claim the moral high ground having porked Prince Kuragin in years gone by.
 
“er indoors TM boiled up omelettes for dinner. I’m thinking of an early night – I’ve not really done much today, but I’m worn out.

16 December 2024 (Monday) - New Door, Plumbing Issues

Last night we watched the Royal Variety Performance on telly. Leaving aside just how crap the show was (it was crap with a capital turd), I found myself fascinated with the woman presenting it. Although she denies having had plastic surgery done, her head looked about thirty years younger than the body to which it was attached. With a pure smooth unsullied face and a neck with more wrinkles than a wrinkled thing she really did look as though someone had pulled her head off of a teenager and stuck it on that teenager’s gran’s body. I commented on Facebook about it last night, and this morning it seemed I wasn’t alone if wondering what was going on there.
And talking of Facebook there was a very impressive squabble this morning about illegal building techniques in Lego models. Grown adults were getting *really* angry, upset and annoyed. Apparently you aren’t allowed to join thin bricks to standard bricks by shoving an edge of the thin brick between the studs of the thicker one. You'd think they'd have better things to worry about, but I suppose for them the long winter evenings must just fly by...
 
The plan for today was to have the living room door and bath taps replaced. The taps have been dripping for quite some time now, and the living room door needed to be replaced with a thick fire-resistant one when we had the loft conversion done twenty years ago, but we never got round to it. I must admit to a degree of scepticism about the door. It’s all very well having a fire resistant door, but the walls either side of it are of the same construction as the door that was coming out. However as I’ve said before there’s no point looking for sense in the law, is there?
The chap was due to start at half past nine… He arrived shortly after eight o’clock.
He spent an age measuring the old living room door then went off to cut the new one to shape. I had a plan that I might take the dogs out so as not to get in his way, so we went out shortly after nine o’clock. Bearing in mind that the bath might not be accessible on our return we didn’t go to the woods. Instead we walked one of the walks I used to walk with Fudge many years ago. Through the park out to the Godinton estate (where we failed to find two geocaches), then down to Great Chart and home past the Environment Centre and South Ashford. About six miles… I thought we would have stayed out of the nice builder’s way. We got home at half past eleven only to find he hadn’t started.
 
I made us both a cuppa and wrote up some CPD until the builders arrived with the new door at half past twelve.
After a lot of bashing and thumping the door was in place by two o’clock. And then we had quite the performance. Turning off all the water was hard work. We found several taps which turned off this and that, but nothing that seemed to turn off the hot water. The builder chap was reluctant to drain the entire system so he’s coming back tomorrow with a bit of kit which will freeze it all, and he says he will do the taps then.
Realistically all the plumbing needs stripping out and starting again. The builder chap suggested we got shot of our boiler and replaced it with a combi. I nodded sagely at this; pretending I knew what he was talking about. Once he’d gone I looked up what a combi was. Apparently a combi is some device which does both the central heating and the hot water at the same time. It would sit where the current boiler is and would do away with the need for the water tank and immersion heater.
According to the Internet a boiler is good for ten to fifteen years. Bearing in mind our current boiler is fourteen years old (we got it on 8 September 2010) perhaps getting a combi might be something for the new year? Sadly at the time of getting the boiler I wrote “if I bung ten quid aside each month, when its time comes the cost of replacement shouldn’t be anywhere near the shock I had this time”. Had I bunged ten quid aside each month like I said I should, I would now have one thousand seven hundred quid which is about the cost of a combi boiler, and all I’d have to find would be the cost of paying someone to install it.
Sadly I didn’t bung anything aside for a new boiler.
 
With the builder gone I sorted us a cuppa and also sorted out today’s Advent story. I had this vague idea when I started this year’s story (only two weeks ago) about a carol-singing robot, but today we’ve got the Easter Bunny taking over Christmas. I can only assume that the voices in my head know where this story is going: I certainly don’t.
 
“er indoors TM then went bowling as she does on a Monday. I settled down with the dogs and sparked up the telly. I started off with “Dad’s Army”. I’ve seen those episodes so many times that I know them pretty much off by heart, but they are rather good nonetheless. I followed this with an episode of “Downton Abbey” in which Lady Mary was off on a dirty weekend, then slept through another episode of “The Silo”. I can’t remember what happened in the first season. I shall have to start again frorn the beginning with that one. And then an episode of “You Rang M’Lord” in which Henry had forgotten to put methylated spirit in the hotplate.
Perhaps that’s where my plumbing has gone wrong?

15 December 2024 (Sunday) - Lydd

I woke with a minor headache. I blame the fifth pint of Harvey’s best. And then I found myself pondering a mystery. When we went to Battle the other evening I was busting for a tiddle all the way home after one pint. After five pints yesterday we drove from Hastings to home via Folkestone and I was fine. What was that all about?
I got up and opened today’s window of the Advent Calendar. I got a rabbit today. That gave me something to ponder as I scoffed toast and rummaged round the Internet.
 
I had a friend request on Facebook this morning seemingly from an old mucker from way back. However my old mate had posted on his real Facebook page that someone was using his name in a fake account, and asked people to report the fake. I reported it. Within seconds I had a message from the Facebook feds saying this forgery went against their community standards and they were going to remove the fake profile... A minute later I had another message saying they decided it didn't go against their community standards and they weren’t going to remove it...
And science has found something odd going on in space. Apparently the universe isn’t doing what science says it should be doing. This is actually amazing and of monumental importance. This is akin to finding that the world isn’t flat. But sadly the masses are more interested in Taylor Swift, Strictly Come Dancing, tits and bingo.
 
We took the dogs out for a little walk. We went to Lydd where there’s a new geocaching adventure lab series and quite a few Munzees too. The dogs behaved (mostly); there were no normal people swarming. A good outing.
On the way there and back we picked up some of the puzzle geocaches I spent ages struggling to solve over the last few months. The puzzle is that you are told the distance and bearing that a geocache is from the point at which a given photograph was taken. All you have to do is find exactly where the photograph was taken. The obvious way to find out was to do a virtual drive around the Romney Marsh using Google Street View, but sadly much of the footage of the Romney Marsh on Google Street View is from over ten years ago, but I got there in the end.
Like all puzzles they were easy when you knew the answer.
 
We came home and had an argument with the Alexa. We wanted some festive Christmas music. The Alexa wanted to play dire dirges. Telling it “Alexa – play Christmas music that isn’t entirely crap” didn’t help. We tried all sorts of commands and still it wanted to play frankly dreadful rubbish.
In the end the Alexa not so much won the fight as I gave up with it.
“er indoors TM boiled up bacon sarnies. I then slobbed on the sofa scoffing them and reading my Kindle app until the voices in my head came up with today’s instalment of the Advent story. And then we met with a minor disaster. We are probably going to have to turn off the water tomorrow. I can distinctly remember a conversation with the chap who did the new kitchen when we talked of how he would build the cupboards so’s we could get to the stopcock. Sadly he didn’t.
 
And then the doorbell rang. Some delivery chap was on the doorstep. He thrust a package into my hand and then jabbered about credit cards. The package was warm. Someone somewhere had ordered a takeout to be delivered. Occasionally we get stuff delivered for Beaver Lane (as opposed to “Road”) so I asked him did he want Beaver Lane or Beaver Road. “Yes” he replied with a dopey smile. It soon became apparent that the chap’s spoken English was as good as my spoken Urdu. With no address on the parcel there wasn’t much else I could do but loudly announce “wrong house”, put the package back in his hands and close the door on him.
 
“er indoors TM sorted some rather good enchiladas which we washed down with a bottle of Jacktone merlot. At £3.99 a bottle from Aldi you really can’t complain.
As we scoffed we watched the semi-final of “Lego Masters: Australia”. It was rather good…

14 December 2024 (Saturday) - Dog Club, Family Party

I woke at half past four and lay awake unable to nod off… and suddenly the alarm was going off. That rarely happens. I opened the next window of my Advent Calendar, then made toast and had my usual brekkie ritual.
This morning there were several arguments on Facebook about episodes of Star Trek that aired thirty years ago, and a religious argument about flying fish on the National Geographic page. There was very little that I’d actually signed up to see though. These days most of the dog-related groups are filled with photos of dogs which have recently died. No one posts pictures of their dogs doing anything; they just wait until it is too late. And Facebook rarely (if ever) shows me anything about walking in the countryside, fishing, Sparks, ELO or any work related stuff. Not even any ladies of dubious morals any more. Mind you these days I seem to get endless suggestions that I might like to join groups about Calvin and Hobbes.
I wouldn’t.
 
I munzed. Some of the local munzees had been cursed overnight (it’s a Munzee thing) and got Wordle on the fourth attempt.
We then set off to Dog Club where we had a rather good time; if somewhat cold and muddy. Dogs charged about in the mud, treats were scoffed. I love it. And one of our number gave us a little pressie with a lovely message in the card thanking us for giving up our Saturday mornings to run it. I must admit I don’t feel I give up anything – I love Dog Club.
 
We came home for a cuppa, and I posted today’s instalment of the Advent Story to the world. I’m not sure where this story is going, but then I never know where the thing is going. I’m sure the voices in my head know what’s happening.
I changed out of muddy trousers, donned my gay apparel and set off to Hastings… via Folkestone to collect “Daddies’ Little Angel TM and Darcie WaaWaa TM. Littlun’s gay apparel was her skeleton dress.
 
We had a rather good afternoon at the family Christmas party. Loads of food and drink, party games (I particularly enjoyed “pass the parcel”) and Santa visited too. The smaller ones had great fun with the dogs. The only down side to the day was that on looking back there must have been over fifty people along and I was certainly in the top five oldest.
 
I slept most of the way home. Today was a rather good day.

13 December 2024 (Friday) - Another Lazy Day

I woke to the sound of “er indoors TM’s alarm. “er indoors TM didn’t though so I prodded her a few times to no avail. Eventually I realized I was prodding Bailey.
 
I got up and opened the next window of today’s Advent Calendar, if only to give the voices in my head something to ponder whilst I scoffed brekkie.
As I set about my toast there was quite the argument on one of the Facebook travel pages that I follow when some woman was furious that he M25 motorway was open today. Apparently some pedestrian got killed on the motorway yesterday, and this idiot woman felt the motorway should be closed today as a sign of respect.
Someone else posted to another group about what a boring fellow her neighbour was as he had taken up calligraphy (posh handwriting) and for want of anything better to copy, was copying out the Bible. Someone was banging on about how they did that at school and he’d copied out psalm 119 which turned out to be the favourite psalm of quite a few people commenting on that Facebook post. For those of my loyal readers who aren’t among the righteous, psalm 119 sings the praises of being a do-gooder. I was tempted to ask where these people stood on psalm 137 which states “Happy is the one who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks” (look it up!) but thought better of doing so. Most so-called Christians get rather upset when you show them that they haven’t actually read their bibles.
 
I got the dogs into the car and we set off to the woods. As we drove Desert Island Discs was on the radio. Today’s castaway was Ebony Rainford-Brent. No – I’d never heard of her either. It turns out that she was the first black woman to play for the England women’s cricket team. She seemed a rather interesting person. I quite like listening to Desert Island Discs as I’m a very nosey person and there’s quite a bit about people’s lives on the show. It’s just a shame that nearly all of those interviewed either pretend to like one of three types of music; pretentious classical rubbish, operatic howling, or frankly dire dirges.
 
We got to the woods and had a good walk. Yesterday I mentioned how quiet the place was. It wasn’t quite so quiet today. As we walked we met another group of dog walkers who were very quick to tell me that the brown spaniel in their group wasn’t their dog at all. Clearly they hoped that dog was with me. The dog seemed to be quite happy walking with them though. Half a mile on, just at the point where we occasionally see deer I could hear a whistling and some shouting. That brown spaniel’s daddy wasn’t happy. And was even less happy when I told him the dog was half a mile away and going in the wrong direction.
Needless to say that what with all the racket he was making we didn’t see any deer today. Not even the dead one – the carcass had gone. Had the ranger cleared it away?
As we got close to the car park so we walked up to the car with a professional dog walker. And as we got to the car so Mabel’s mummy drove up. I opened my car’s boot and announced “Boot Dogs”. Both Morgan and Treacle jumped in the boot to the amazement of the onlookers. I get rather smug when they do as they are told. I told them that Bailey is too small to jump as I loaded her in.
 
We came home to have tummies washed. For once no one had rolled in muck, and it wasn’t long before all three dogs were snoring. I wrote up some CPD, then pondered today’s Advent story before spending the afternoon watching episodes of “Four in a Bed”. This afternoon a particularly porky young lady and her even chubbier father delighted in finding petty fault with all the other establishments in the competition, and then pulled out in a strop when it became clear that for all their faults everywhere else was streets ahead of what they were offering.
 
“er indoors TM set off to see her dad (what with it being his birthday). I didn’t go. More and more Treacle is proving too noisy to be left unsupervised. Instead I had a shower and settled myself in front of the telly for another telly-thon. I started off with Downton Abbey in which the footman James was caught in flagrante with Lady Anstruther (and they were doing the dirty deed too).  And then we had the cliffhanger of the second season of “The Empress” in which the Emperor went off to battle in the Second Italian War of Independence. Hardly a cliffhanger though as Wikipedia tells us the chap was still alive fifty years later.
 
In between telly I dishwashered and laundried. I didn’t spend the entire afternoon and evening watching telly.  
Just most of it. Being semi-retired was all very well in the summer when I had stuff to do in the garden. It is becoming rather dull right now.

12 December 2024 (Thursday) - Dog Cam, Pot Noodle, Ironing, Telly

I’ve still got this cold that I’ve had for a day or so. It seems worse in the mornings and I felt particularly grim today. I got up and once I’d had a scrape I made toast and rolled my eyes as I peered into the Internet.  There’s never any arguments as bitter as those on the Facebook pages about garden ponds.
One ongoing squabble makes me laugh. There’s two sides to this one.
One group of people feel that tap water and rain water are urine straight from Satan’s willie and they would rather fill their ponds with concentrated sulphuric acid rather than with rain or tap water. These people spend all their lives treating their ponds with plants and filtering them to get the levels of various chemicals just to exactly the level that manufacturers of test kits feel they should be. And once they’ve got everything to just the level that the kit says it should be, they then then regularly empty out between a quarter to a half of the pond water every month and fill it with the tap water or rain water about which they are so derogatory. And they then fart around trying to get the levels of chemicals back to where they were.
The other group of people just let the pond get on with it, and occasionally top the pond up from the hose when it needs it.
Neither side seems to realise that both have pristine ponds.
They were all kicking off again this morning with the chemicals brigade claiming that rain water contains very high levels of chlorine. The fact that it doesn’t was neither here nor there to anyone.
 
I took the dogs up to the woods for our walk. As always, once away from the car park we hardly saw anyone. But we did find ourselves following some very normal people at one point. A mile from the nearest road and still they had their dogs on leads. Seriously?
I felt the woods were quiet today though. Quiet as in silent. Usually we hear birds chirping and squawking, and squirrels rustling in trees. And if we’re lucky there’s deer crashing about. But today was silence. You really could have heard a pin drop. What was that all about?
As we came back to the car park so we met a labrador. Mabel. Mabel’s mummy was rather taken with Bailey and Morgan, and shared dog treats with them. That was a result.
 
We came home for a bath. Tummies were grubby and again Bailey had disgraced herself by rolling in something foul. And with bath bathed so my phone had a flurry of alert messages. Somehow or other the Dog Cam I set up a while ago had decided to tell me every time it detected motion. And post-bath zoomies made for a lot of motion.
I eventually got the thing to stop bothering me, but it took some doing.
 
With it quiet I popped over the road for some lunch. They have some interesting stuff in the shop over the road. I got some Chinese hot chicken flavoured pot noodle thing. It was rather tasty, but had my lips and mouth burning for about half an hour after I’d finished scoffing.
With dinner scoffed I cracked on with the ironing. As I scoffed and ironed I watched more episodes of “The Empress” in which there was consternation when it transpired that the archduke had gone down with a case of manky knobrot. Princess wotsit of Belgium really wasn’t impressed, what with the archduke having plighted his troth and everything.
 
“er indoors TM came home and boiled up pizza and chips which we scoffed whilst watching Celebrity Bake off. During the show Lucy Beaumont declared that you can eat a lot more if you take your bra off.
Can you?

11 December 2024 (Wednesday) - A Walk, Tesco...

I wasn’t feeling on top form last night, and I slept through for ten hours. I woke with a bit of a sore throat and a mild headache. I suspect I’ve picked up the bug that “er indoors TM has been suffering with this week. She says she caught it from Darcie WaaWaa TM but I won’t hear a word said against my favourite lady.
I made toast and had my usual look at the Internet. Today quite a few people were posting that they were feeling rather sad on the run-up to Christmas having lost loved ones. I wish there was something I could say to help these people…
 
With brekkie scoffed I took the dogs up to the woods. You could see we’d had serious winds recently – there wasn’t a single leaf left on any of the deciduous trees, and quite a lot of branches of evergreens were down as well. As we walked we met a few other people near the car park. One chap couldn’t hurry away quick enough as he said there was a spotty dog following him of which he was clearly terrified. We didn’t see any spotty dogs.
But as always once away from the car park area we only saw one person in three and a half miles. A jogger who made me laugh. She stopped and chatted and asked (with a smile) if I felt like her in that she’d been running for miles, not seen anyone else for ages, and on seeing me immediately felt resentful wondering who that bald bloke was to think he could walk in her personal woods. I agreed entirely. We too walk for miles and see so few other people that it might as well be our own woods.
As we walked I kept a close eye on Bailey. She shivers at Dog Club, and in the afternoons when the heating isn’t on. But she didn’t shiver at all when we were walking. Strange…
We came home where I washed mud from bellies and paws, and fox poo from backs. Well, from one back. Bailey.
 
After a cuppa I popped to Tesco for a bit of shopping. Tesco was hard work. Unlike the Tesco in Pembury yesterday, people were looking where they were going today. But I struggled; if only they could lay the store out in the same order as “er indoors TM had written my shopping list.
But I did have fun with one rather posh looking woman. As I reached for a jar of cheapo jam she was picking up a jar of jam costing six times the price. “Rich Lady?!” I commented, and after a little chat about how I’m a poor pensioner I shamed her into buying a jar of the cheap stuff.
I hope she likes it. I do.
 
I then spent an hour or so going through rotas. I think management might have short-changed me on hours. Mind you when I say “think” I probably mean “hope”. After an hour I sent an email which will probably have some poor secretary spending a day to show that their sums are right and mine are wrong.
I wrote up today’s Advent story, wrote up some CPD, and by the time I’d had a shower the afternoon was gone.
 
After I’d watched today’s episode of Downton Abbey (in which Mr. Bates did for Mr. Green) “er indoors TM boiled up a very good bit of scoff which we washed down with a bottle of pinot grigio. I was going to say “sadly a grim bottle of pinot grigio”, but I’ve never had any other type of pinot grigio.

10 December 2024 (Tuesday) - Early Shift

With an alarm set I was awake far too early this morning. Whilst the rest of the world snored I watched an episode of “The Empress” in which the archduke tried to have his wicked way with Princess wotsit of Belgium.
And then I had my usual rummage round the Internet. There is usually at least one bitter argument raging, and this morning’s was about when and why Dodos went extinct.
Do these people have nothing better to do with their time?
There wasn’t a lot else going on this morning; it was probably too early.
I had a quick Munz, opened my Advent Calendar and got ready for the one day I’m working this week.
 
I set off to work on a very dark and rainy morning. As I drove I listened to the pundits on the radio spouting their drivel. More wars were kicking off in the Middle East, the government seems to have run out of steam... and New Zealand is looking to ban greyhound racing which would leave the UK as one of only four countries in the world where it is still legal.
 
I stopped off at Tesco in Pembury to get a sandwich. As always the manned tills were closed, and a gaggle of surly disinterested staff lurked around the self-service area alternately getting in the way of and sneering at those serving themselves. If I knew of a supermarket that doesn’t have self-service tills, is open before seven o’clock in the morning and isn’t a major diversion from my journey to work they’d have my money.
 
Work was much the same as it ever is. But starting early meant that I finished early. Having got to work in the dark I left just as the sun was setting. Sadly working in Pembury meant I didn’t get home as early as I might have done, but there it is. I’m only working one day this week so I can’t complain.
 
I came home to an empty house; “er indoors TM and the dogs were babysitting Darcie WaaWaa TM. They came home half way through “Downton Abbey” in which Lady Mary was accused of being aloof. An allegation the Turkish attaché would have refuted had he survived the vigorous porking Lady Mary did at him.
 
The plan was to have fish and chips for dinner, but having scoffed all the chips the other day we resorted to our usual fallback position of KFC.
We scoffed it whilst watching last year’s Christmas Bake-Off and whilst listening to dogs snoring.
I might join them soon – the four o’clock start has taken its toll.

9 December 2024 (Monday) - Rainy Day

After a rather good night’s kip I opened my Lego Advent Calendar and pondered.
After I’d shaved I saw that everyone else had got up. I say “got up” – the dogs had gone from sleeping on the bed to sleeping on the sofa and dog beds.
 
I made toast and had my usual rummage round the Internet. It was the same as ever. Fewer and fewer people seem to be posting on social media (or if they are, I don’t see it), but one of the posts I saw made me think. There’s been an episode in America where the head honcho of a healthcare insurance scheme was recently killed. Healthcare in America is different to here in the UK. In the UK we have (for the most part) one organization which provides healthcare as is needed. That healthcare being given on the grounds of independently generated guidelines being applied to each case. In America it seems that healthcare is provided in the basis of how much money you’ve paid the insurance company, and the insurance companies are getting more and more picky about what they will pay for in order to maximise their profits. Not that they will pay out the full amount anyway. And healthcare ain’t cheap. I can remember thirty years ago my boss at the time priced up the cost of a standard treatment for anyone presenting with a particular form of blood cancer. Back then the treatment cost one hundred and ten thousand pounds. I can remember a friend spending a couple of weeks in an ITU bed and an American friend telling me that even with insurance, in the USA you’d have to sell your house to make up the money not covered by the insurance.
Healthcare ain’t cheap.
But so many Americans feel the state-provided healthcare offered by pretty much the rest of the world is fundamentally a bad thing. I wish I knew why.
 
I decided against going to the woods this morning. The weather was alternating between glorious sunshine ant torrential rain showers every fifteen minutes, and the dogs were asleep anyway. They seem to know when we are going out (when they get very over-excited) and when we aren’t (when they carry on sleeping).
Instead I drove up to the post office to post a couple of cards and to collect a parcel. Apparently Royal Mail had tried to deliver a parcel on Saturday; I only found out when I looked at my Amazon account and saw that it said “Held for pickup at carrier location”. The chap at the parcel office wasn’t impressed that I had no delivery slip. He didn’t actually call me a liar when I said that one hadn’t been left but wasn’t keen on typing the tracking number into his system. Particularly when on the second attempt he wondered if it might have been on the other system. It was on the second system after all. Sadly being on the second system meant that the parcel had just been chucked on a huge pile out the back of the sorting office on Saturday evening and the staff would deal with it when they has people in. Apparently this chap was working on his own.
I was told they will send me an email if and when they find it, but ironically the parcel arrived at home a couple of hours later.
I went on to Tesco where again there were dozens (if not hundreds) of people blundering around completely unaware that there were dozens (if not hundreds) of other people in the shop as well.
 
I’d arrived at Tesco in sunshine; I left in torrential rain. By the time I’d made us both a cuppa the sunshine was back again.
I did have plans to repair the poggered cupboard in the bedroom today, but “er indoors TM said that it wasn’t a job I could do on my own. I think that was more “not allowed to” rather than “not capable of”, but that left me at something of a loose end.
I wrote up some CPD then had a little look at my bank account. Every month I’ve been giving money to the Kent Wildlife Trust. I have no idea who or what they are, and I only set up the payments on account of the impressive chest being brandished by the young lady on their fundraising stall at the County show a few years ago.
In all honesty I’d rather give a bung to the goat sanctuary.
 
When at a loose end I usually spend my time watching telly. I started off with episodes of “Four in a Bed”. Today’s episodes followed the standard format of three rather good bed and breakfast establishments being criticized for every piddling detail by someone who considered themselves to be a “big businessman” who in fact was running a rather piss-poor dive.
I followed this with an episode of “Downton Abbey” in which it transpired that Lady Edith’s paramour has vanished leaving her tubbed, and once “er indoors TM had set off bowling I watched more of “The Empress”. She too was tubbed, but seemed more chuffed about it than Lady Edith was.
 
As I watched telly the torrential rain continually alternated with clear spells…
And the Normal People have arrived in my Lego Advent story

8 December 2024 (Sunday) - Fun With Littlun

With “er indoors TM  in the attic room with Darcie WaaWaa TM last night, all the dogs went up there too and I had a peaceful night’s sleep. I did wake to find little Bailey curled up next to me though. Apparently she got onto the bed on her own. That’s a first; she’s never managed it before.
I woke at the time I was originally supposed to be starting work. I’d swapped today’s shift for yesterday’s so’s I could have some time with littlun. I got up and had a quick shave before she got up. As I scraped I had flashbacks of cub camp when I used to shave silly-early so as to have a scrape in peace before the horrors arose.
 
As littlun wreaked havoc I quickly scoffed toast, and as I tried to stop the dogs scoffing her cereals I had a look at the Internet. It’s been a while, but I had another dubious friend request on Facebook. Today Ruby Thersa wants to be my friend. Or so she said. She didn’t say much else on her Facebook page; presumably letting her chest do the talking.
She should tell it to be quiet.
 
I sat down with littlun and we spent an entertaining time lining up all the toy cars then shouting “WATCH OUT” and launching them at each other (and the telly). In the background Lube-Tube was playing Cocobi children’s songs. Some weren’t quite what you might expect – have a look at this one. Should a two-year-old be watching this? I found myself wondering how many small children had shat themselves at the two minutes and fifty-three seconds point when it invites everyone to “come on and join the fart song”.
Funny old world, eh?
 
Once her mother had told us she had returned from the cinema we took littlun home, and I then started preparations for February’s Geo-Meet. Geo-HQ have allowed me to stage a community celebration event. Rather than having the usual sort of event in a pub somewhere (which gets expensive) we’ve secured the use of the scout hut and we are going to have an afternoon playing board games. We can take along whatever drinks and snacks we want, and for the price of the first round in a pub we can be drinking and scoffing all afternoon.
 
“er indoors TM boiled up scran which we scoffed whilst watching the semi finals of “Lego Masters: Australia”, and with scran scoffed I cracked out the port and cheese. And crackers. The dogs like crackers.
 
I’m worn out…

7 December 2024 (Saturday) - Late Shift

I wasn’t awake quite as early as yesterday, but I was still awake earlier than I might have liked. I got up, opened today’s window on the Advent Calendar, and watched another episode of “The Empress” in which our heroine again got them out and did the dirty deed. This time it was an al-fresco portion which saved the scriptwriters a few minutes of effort.
 
Facebook was dull, but I had an email today. Two weeks ago I emailed three local councilors to whinge about the local traffic wardens who were ticketing cars parked on yellow lines around road works in a temporarily closed street whilst ignoring parking mayhem at the shops near home. I finally got a reply saying that the traffic wardens don’t have any discretion in issuing tickets. I’ve told her that if that is the case why to they go for the easy targets but not ticket the ones causing the obstructions.
I sent out birthday wishes too. A Facebook friend is thirty today. Thirty – I remember when she was ten when at Teston kite festival. If asked I would have said she was probably in her late teens. Where do the years go?
 
I munzed, I wordled and we set off to Dog Club. Attendance was noticeably down on last week, but despite the rain and the high winds we still had fourteen dogs along. It was a shame that Morgan got a bit over-excited. Two minutes muzzle time soon calmed him, and after that he was good. Whenever things kicked off he would make a point of backing off and being on the sidelines.
As we drove home we listened to Steve on the radio. Having completely drawn a blank on the guess the lyrics competition I eventually got the mystery year competition. Was it 1968? Was it 1973? Chuck Berry’s ding-a-ling was 1972. Steve also gave the Dog Club a plug on the radio, which was good. I wonder if we will get any new members through it?
 
Once home “er indoors TM gave the dogs a warming shower whilst I popped up the road to see if Mukki had any pastries. I came home with almond croissants which went well with a cuppa.
As I scoffed and guzzled I counted up the Dog Club money. Every two weeks I count up the money in the pot, pocket it and transfer that amount (plus our subs) into the bank account of the people whose field we use. Today I transferred over fifty quid.
 
What with not getting in till late this evening I posted up today’s Advent Calendar story, then set off to work.
I set off to work a tad earlier than I might. Steve was on the radio telling of local road closures because of the high winds so I didn't want to take any chances. I don't like driving in heavy rain and the wind was gusting at over fifty miles per hour. I listened to Steve read out the wrong train times (from the previous hour), and then the reception got a tad iffy so I turned to Ivor Biggun songs and sang along to those for the rest of my journey.
I got to work with enough time to go to the works canteen.
People often joke about hospital food; in my experience the stuff ain't bad. Tandoori cod, chips, apple pie and custard all for less than six quid.
 
Work was much the same as ever on a Saturday afternoon. Arguably a tad busy just for little old me on my own. As I worked I had a message - “er indoors TM had destroyed the shower. I'm not sure what she expected me to do from twenty five miles away. I suggested a plumber. Ten minutes later she sent the news that she'd fixed it herself. She's quite handy with the plumbing; she fixed the chodbin a while ago what I'd all but given up on it.
 
After an hour or so I had messages about Darcie WaaWaa TM who was having a little sleepover with us. Having spent the afternoon scoffing crisps and various snacks she wasn't hungry and wouldn’t eat her dinner. “er indoors TM wasn't best pleased. I was told that my dinner would be that which littlun hadn't eaten; I distinctly formed the impression that littlun's misdemeanours were somehow my fault. Not that she can do any wrong.
 
I came home to mayhem…

6 December 2024 (Friday) - Rather Dull

Finding myself wide awake far too early I got up, opened the Advent Calendar, made toast, and watched an episode of “The Empress” in which she “got them out” and did the dirty deed with the Emperor. Perhaps I’m just getting more puritanical in my old age, but more and more I’m of the opinion that having the leading lady in any TV show or film getting them out and doing the dirty deed is just laziness on the part of the scriptwriters who are saved from having to come up with five more minutes of dialogue.
 
I then sparked up my lap-top and peered into the Internet. It was still there. It told me that the chap who used to run our Boys Brigade company had a birthday today. It would also have been my parents’ old dog’s birthday today, and I have a sneaking suspicion that it would also have been my grandmother’s birthday too.
Not much had happened on-line overnight really. There was a rather bitter argument about the last episode of the third season of Blake’s Seven (which aired in 1980). I didn’t get involved, but I’ll make the observation that those who argue about episodes of Blake’s Seven from over forty years ago are generally far more conversant with the actual episodes than those who argue about episodes of Star Trek from the same period.
 
I went to work via the co-op to get a sandwich. Like the last time I tried in the morning the place was closed. But today it was closed and in darkness, but with quite a queue outside. I didn't hang about and went to Sainsbury's near work instead. As I drove the pundits on the radio were spouting their usual nonsense.
There was talk about Nick Clegg today. Remember him? Fifteen years ago he was leader of the Liberal Democrats and threw away pretty much everything the party stood for so as to get a national referendum for government by a system of proportional representation that everyone knew was doomed to failure. After five years of just saying "yes Dave" to everything the Prime Minister at the time wanted eventually, like all politicians, the electorate gave him the heave-ho.
And seemingly like all politicians he landed on his feet, and is now the deputy head honcho at Meta - the company which owns Facebook and Instagram. Apparently Sir Nick (he's a "sir" now - all right for some isn't it?) is concerned that Elon Musk has too much of an influence in American politics.
I expect Mr. Musk probably has, but I would cynically ask if Sir Nick would be quite so vocal if Mr. Musk didn't own Sir Nick's main competitor?
 
Work was the same as ever, but I was on the early shift and so got out early. It was already getting dark as I drove out of the car park, and was completely dark when I got home.
Having had inspiration I posted up today’s Advent story,
 
We had a good bit of scoff whilst watching more “Junior Taskmaster”. I’m feeling worn out… When I’m not working all is fine. When I am working I’m wide awake at three o’clock…
Today was one of those dull days.

5 December 2024 (Thursday) - Rained All Day

I got up and opened the fifth window of my Advent Calendar…and started wondering about it. And then I had a little look in the garden. The electrical fix I’d performed yesterday was working fine despite the heavy overnight rain we’d had. I saw that as a result.
I made toast and sparked up my lap-top. The anti-virus immediately gave me a little lecture about package scams. Apparently over a third of the UK population have had these text messages claiming there is some issue with whatever it is that you have ordered on-line and either ask for money, or give you a link on which to click; this link immediately downloading malicious software to your device. One of the first things the anti-virus suggested this morning was stopping and thinking if you actually ordered anything on-line. It claimed that the people most likely to fall for this scam were those who hadn’t ordered anything in the first place.
And there was quite the argument about the USS Yorktown in the film Star Trek IV… it was a shame that those getting rather angry had the name of the fictional spaceship wrong. It wasn’t Yorktown, it was Saratoga.
 
With “er indoors TM off out to a craft club extravaganza I took the dogs up to the woods. The weather forecast said that the drizzle would hold off for the morning… it eventually eased up a little.
We had a good walk. As we walked we saw two other groups in the distance who on seeing us popped their dogs onto leads and hurried off in different directions to avoid us. Are we that bad? Mind you we met a third lot at the end of our walk when walking up the hill to the car park. They saw me and the girls and immediately put their dogs on leads and all but sprinted up the hill to get away from us. They hadn’t expected Morgan to do his usual thing of running up the hill through the woods then running down the hill to find us. This lot of people were so intent on watching us and getting away from us they screamed out loud when Morgan ran through the middle of them as he flew down the hill.
We came home for a warm shower. For some reason Bailey screamed when being washed. I have no idea why.
 
I did the dishwasher-ing, then as the dogs snored I settled down for a lazy day in front of the telly. Season two of “Silo” had been released on Apple TV… it was a shame that the Apple TV app on the SkyQ said there was no internet connection. But (strangely) there was enough internet for Netflix. I started re-watching “The Empress”. There’s a new season out. Apparently I liked the first season. I have no memory of it, but according to my diary I watched it two years ago when I said it was “quite entertaining for all that (like with “House of the Dragon”) nothing much seems to be happening”.  At the same time I mentioned another TV show – “Better Than Us” – which I also don’t remember.
The Empress” was rather good.
 
I uploaded today’s episode of this year’s Christmas story. The plot has taken an unexpected twist. Mind you I say “plot” – there isn’t one. I’m making it up as I go along, and am living in terror as to what I will find every morning.
 
And then “er indoors TM returned home. We loaded the dogs into the car and set off to Battle. Gordon was staging a geo-meet outside the Abbey and there were supposed to be lights and carol singers and events and activities. Sadly the weather was against us, but having arrived early and having had a crafty pint in the Abbey hotel, we had a good little catch-up with friends despite the rain.
We came home via the chip shop down the road. Two portions of cod and chips and a couple of pickled onions – twenty-five quid. Am I mean in thinking that’s expensive?

4 December 2024 (Wednesday) - Big Cats

I went to the loo shortly after three o’clock and came back to find minimal (i.e. sod all) bedspace and all four of them snoring away. I tried to get back to sleep, but wresting space took some doing and it was rather noisy, so I got up and watched drivel on telly for an hour before trying the bed again.
I got a couple of hours kip.
 
I got up properly and opened the fourth window of my Advent Calendar… a skateboard. How does that fit in with the story so far? I made toast and whilst the voices in my head pondered skateboards I had my usual look at the Internet. It was still there. The stupid were very quick to show off their stupidity, and everyone else even quicker to laugh at them. Some half-wit had proven the spontaneous creation of matter… he’d stuck a seed into a plant pot filled with soil and a plant had grown. But there was still as much soil in the pot as there had been when he’d planted the seed. So where did the matter making up the plant come from? This fellow was serious!
 
I took the dogs up to the woods where we had a good four-mile walk. We met a few other walkers near the car park and all encounters passed off well, but once we were more than a quarter of a mile from the car park we didn’t see anyone else at all. We did see a deer skeleton though. And that made me wonder. That skeleton wasn’t there yesterday; we would have seen it as we walked past as it was rather obvious. So one of two things had happened. Either the deer had dropped dead after ten o’clock yesterday morning and had been stripped to bone in less than a day, or something had dragged the skeleton to where we found it..
I’m wondering… The bones looked a tad grim. It looked more than a day old. But what could have dragged it? Surely it would have been too heavy for a fox? It turns out that there have been big cat sightings reported in Kings Wood (admittedly a few years ago). I asked on the Big Cats in Kent Facebook page, and a few people commented that there *have* been sightings of big cats recently, but the leading light on there said that he didn’t work with the press any more. I can’t say I blame him; I suspect they’d just be taking the piss.
Mind you one chap did mention the Beast of Badlesmere.
 
We came home where the dogs had a dunk in the bath. Bailey had brown smears down her back (yuk!), and Morgan was a bit whiffy too.
With dogs scrubbed I went on a little shopping trip. First of all to Wickes where I got a waterproof electrical connector. And then on to Screwfix to get the screwdriver that Wickes didn’t have. I know that I can see B&Q from our back window, but over the years I’ve found that Wickes and Screwfix are friendly and helpful, and B&Q are utterly disinterested.
And then I popped into Tesco as I had orders from “er indoors TM to get some milk. As I walked in I saw that they were doing bottles of Baileys at less than half price to ClubCard holders. And there were one or two other bargains to be had if you brandished your ClubCard. Cheese, biscuits, doughnuts, port… When I came to pay the bill was fifty-seven quid. But when I waved my ClubCard that dropped to forty quid. In the past I’ve been rather disparaging about Tesco ClubCard. But now I’m a believer.
And I’m convinced that I saw Brad Boimler in the queue for the checkout.
 
I came home where we scoffed some of the doughnuts for lunch, then I got busy in the garden. A couple of years ago the electrical cable from the kitchen to the garden water features melted on a particularly hot day, and then got chewed by rats. I repaired it at the time, but over the last couple of months the supposedly waterproof join has taken to falling apart in the rain. So today I took it all apart, ran the cable through a hose pipe to (hopefully) make it rat- and weather-proof and connected it all back up again. Ideally I’d not have a join and have one cable going all the way, but since we had the kitchen done we can’t easily (at all!) get a cable through the air brick and to the plug.
At the moment all is working. Here’s hoping it stays working.
As I fiddled about outside the voices in my head came up with today’s Advent story.
 
“er indoors TM boiled up a very good curry which we washed down with a bottle of plonk whilst watching more “Junior Taskmaster”. And with dinner scoffed I cracked open the cheese and crackers I’d bought in Tesco earlier. The dogs like the crackers, and I have the cheese.
Blue Brie… not too shabby at all.

3 December 2024 (Tuesday) - Christmas Ale

I woke, and went straight to my Advent Calendar. A dog in a Christmas jumper with a bowl and some bones. Again I realized I should really have opened the thing a couple of months ago. What was I going to say for today’s installment.
 
I made toast and peered into the Internet. Apparently there’s three more episodes of “Red Dwarfcoming out next year. Is this a good thing? The show started very well all those years ago, but the last few dozen episodes weren’t that good. I’m reminded of “Fawlty Towers” where they made a point of only doing two seasons, or “Bottom” where Adrian Edmunson said no to doing a fourth season. But perhaps I’m coming at it from the wrong angle. I suppose for the actors and the writers this is guaranteed income?
I sparked up my Munzee app and after a lot of fighting with it I deployed a Widdle. Apparently you can now do a Widdle through the Munzee app.
And having got Wordle on the fifth attempt I got the dogs together and we went out.
 
We drove up to the woods and (in a novel break with tradition) had an uneventful walk. We met a couple of other dog walkers and each encounter passed off without episode.
As we drove home I was very conscious of a car behind me. It drove down the rather steep hill from Challock seemingly inches from my back bumper, flew past at the sharp corner at the bottom of the hill, then tail-ended the car in front of me all the way to the traffic lights where we all stopped. It then drove through a residential area far too fast before finally flying into Dobbies car park at breakneck speed.
If I could remember my password for Rate Driver Dot Com I’d have squealed it up.
 
I got out the Hoover and watched Bailey with a smile. As I pulled the Hoover out she watched me, but without moving and pretending to be asleep. The moment I turned it on she flew at it in full attack mode. She is a nightmare with the Hoover, and when I mow the lawn I have to be sure she is inside or she will have the lawnmower.
And then the postman came with my early Christmas pressie; a dozen bottles of Shepherd Neame Christmas ale. That’ll do very nicely.
 
“er indoors TM set off to Folkestone for babysitting duties. I set up the ironing board and cracked on at the ironing whilst watching the last few episodes of “Brassic”. As I ironed I was struck with inspiration for what I might say about today’s installment of the Advent Calendar story.
“er indoors TM returned with kebab which we washed down with a bottle of the Christmas ale whilst watching Junior Taskmaster. That was rather good. As was the Christmas ale –at seven per cent proof, you can’t complain…