Sunday, 31 August 2025
Four Photos: Nearly a month out of date
Sunday, 10 August 2025
Four Photos: Elephant!
Saturday, 5 July 2025
Four Photos: Wishful Thinking?
Sunday, 29 June 2025
Four Photos: Bat!
Sunday, 22 June 2025
Art vs Artist
Thursday, 19 June 2025
Four Photos: The Drier Side of Britain
Saturday, 7 June 2025
Four Photos: 4
Thursday, 22 May 2025
Four Photos: CCGH
Thursday, 15 May 2025
Four Photos: Let There Be Light
Saturday, 10 May 2025
Four Photos: Bee Edition
Monday, 8 November 2021
GPE #3 : Top-Dressing with Hound
H O U N D
at the
Gymkhana of Gardening
Hound is not a gardener - he lives in Birmingham, for Christsakes! - but has seen fit to take part in this "gymkhana of gardening" (his own words) in his own inimitable way. Let's see what he has to show us:
"Against my better judgement, a picture of me gardening"
Now, Hound only sent me two images displaying his gardening 'skills' - the one above, and another that beggars description, quite frankly. But, before we get to that one, I scoured his 2021 blog posts in an effort to find some greenery to pad this out a bit. The results were... lacking, let's just say. I found two pictures only very tangentially related to gardening - both from April:
Saturday, 3 July 2021
"You love secrets. You want to marry secrets and have half-secret, half-human children."
How has half the year passed by already? How?!?
Anyway, continuing on from the first quarter's update, here are the highlights of what I've read, watched and listened to from April to June:
Read
Yes we have books on a chair. Why bother reading, otherwise? |
∘ Star Trek Deep Space Nine: The Lives of Dax, edited by Marco Palmieri - Again. For the millionth time (although I didn't read every life, only my favourites).
∘ Bridget Jones's Diary, by Helen Fielding - Again, again.
∘ Star Trek The Motion Picture: Inside the Art and Visual Effects, by Jeff Bond & Gene Kozicki - I found this to be a rather fascinating read, and I had no idea of the time pressures and obstacles the production was up against. Although, I'd've liked a few more pictures. Actually, I should be more specific as there are loads of cool pictures, it's just that many of them are quite small (in order to fit them in, I should think, otherwise the book would be the size of a car), and I would like to see even more photos of the V'Ger model (because I'd recently found some that I hadn't seen before online somewhere, so I had my expectations up). All that being said, there are some gorgeous full & two-page spreads of photos and artwork that did not disappoint.
∘ Star Trek: Living Memory, by Christopher L. Bennett - I love the 80s Star Trek movie era, Uhura, and Christopher Bennett's Trek novels, so I'd got my hopes way up for this one. While it employed the exacting and precise writing style of his previous novels, easily recognisable characterisation, and an excellent use of continuity-weaving as always, Living Memory fell rather flat for me. I couldn't "hear" Uhura (although the other characters came through easily) and I'd like her to have featured more than she does. I thought the conflict conversations between Uhura and Shastri, and Kirk and Janith-Lau/Arcturian Warborn were too much like speeches - all civil and reasonable - and so I found them unrealistic and rather dull. However, I did like the elephants (more please!), "meeting" Uhura's family, the look at Denobula, and the inclusion of Clark Terrell and the Reliant (from ST II), and Joel Randolph (from ST IV).
∘ The Flight of the Pterosaurs, a pop-up book by Keith Moseley - Rather spare on text, but beautifully illustrated. The pop-ups are rarely of the pterosaurs, strangely - instead they're of plants and insects in the scenes, mostly. Although, the final pop-up is quite spectacular - two Quetzalcoatlus northropi soaring over a sauropod corpse.
∘ Star Trek: Dwellers in the Crucible, by Margaret Wander Bonanno - I hadn't read this one* in a LONG time, and had almost forgotten how "grown up" this novel seems - mainly, I think, because the Enterprise crew barely feature in it. The story is based around the kidnapping of a young human woman and her Vulcan would-be friend, and how they bond while in captivity. Some of it is rather harrowing, and not everyone gets out unscathed (or even alive).
Wednesday, 27 January 2021
Isn't It Drafty In Here?!
It was while dragging a draft post about books into 2021 and getting it fit to be published, that I noticed that there were 1300 posts on this blog. But, upon closer inspection, 16 of them were drafts, so it'll be at least a couple of months before I hit that nice, round 1300 published posts.
I pondered deleting the drafts as some of them are bloody ancient, but I thought I might actually finish them off one day and publish them. Then I got to wondering if anyone else has a load of half-finished (or less) posts languishing in their "drafts" folder. So, do you? If I show you mine, will you show me yours? I hope so, because here are mine:
Out of these first five, I'd just about managed to get "Books" in some sort of order, but I've ruined it with some questionable font/size choices, so that's going to take some unravelling. Then, I'm preparing for this years "Coven Awards" as I had an idea for a revamp which means taking note of things as they happen, rather than trying to remember stuff in a panic half-way through December. There's also some preparation for a trip over the Cusp for "Ms Scarlet's Birthday" in March - but the rest of that post depends on whether we get this pandemic under control and the Cusp opens its borders. Obviously, "Isn't It Drafty In Here" is this post, which just leaves "It's a Faake! prose" - which I will probably delete it as it's only a half-arsed Star Trek story that, despite the Jan 3 date, has actually been hanging around since at least Feb 2019 (which is the penultimate time that I edited it). The only reason it's still hangning around is that I've been using it to upload images to my Blogger gallery, and Jan 3rd was the last time I did that...
Thursday, 14 January 2021
Blue Bottom and Rainbow
So, what have I been up to since The Year of Ferrero Rochering Dangerously ended and now? (Other than that Tippi Hedren moment and Ms Scarlet's First Vinyl meme, of course - see previous post.)
Well, apart from work and wandering about the countryside surrounding Hexenhäusli Device, not a lot. As these photos go to show...
First up from 27th December, the titular blue bottom and a load of clay:
Saturday, 9 January 2021
Stay, Destiny Foghorn!
I've been half-heartedly working on a photo-post on-and-off all day, but my heart just isn't in it, so instead, here is my go at Ms Scarlet's meme: "What was the first vinyl single you ever bought?"
Well, it was "Stay" by Shakespears Sister back in 1992:
In fact, it was the first and only vinyl record I ever bought. And the only reason for that is that all the cassette tapes and CDs had sold out (although, I'm not sure that I even had a CD player back then?).
~o~
On a related note, I really wanted to feature French & Saunders' spoof of "Stay" (and "I Don't Care") "Destiny" by Dickens Daughters (which features in the first episode of their fourth series, "Misery"), but there's no clip on YouTube (however, for those of you in the UK, it is on BBC iPlayer!).
EDIT: Jon found the clip on DailyMotion:
So instead (of the clip that wasn't on YT, but is on DM, and can now be found above, meaning that this bit is now surplus to requirements but I'm keeping it as its funny. Well, I think so anyway...), may I present this exceedingly poor quality, much shorter clip - that I still find pant-wettingly hilarious - from The Mary Whitehouse Experience, performed by David Baddiel and Rob Newman:
~o~
Ms Scarlet's "Did I Win Yet?" Award/Quiz/Competition/Event thingy?
Sunday, 5 April 2020
A Write Panic Reference: Things on Chairs
If you haven't already done so, I urge you to go and give A Write Panic a read. It is a collaborative blog from the mind of Ms Scarlet (she also set it up and organised it, too!) which features ten talented and enthusiastic bloggers - oh, and me.
There are no spoilers in this post, so the story won't be ruined if you read this first. Particularly as these objects are what I imagined were the "things on chairs" at the end of my latest A Write Panic post, but as I didn't describe them with any definition (well, except for the fondant fancy and the Ferrero Rocher), someone else may depict them in a different way.
The spindle shaped vial containing that blue potion, is none other than the Elixir of Life as featured in the film Death Becomes Her.
[image missing] Unfortunately, I can't show you the pink fondant fancy as it got et.
(I can tell you, however, that it wasn't a Mr Kipling cake, otherwise it would have been a French Fancy)
The towel - a spare on loan from the Beeblebrox Estate - a very useful object (and 100% Egyptian cotton, no less).
The "old clay pot with mould growing inside it" is Daughter of the Fifth House, Lwaxana Troi's, Sacred Chalice of Rixx. I'm sure the Holy Rings of Betazed were on another chair further down the corridor...
The collection of sea glass is, of course, the glass island that featured at Ms Scarlet's.
The Bottle of Greed is another one of Ms Scarlet's creations, featured here.
The universe cannot be photographed convincingly, so may I direct you to Ms Scarlet's Portrait of a Universe, instead. A far more comprehensible and erudite interpretation.
I couldn't get a good photo of the Ferrero Rocher because it was so awesomely perfect that Camera could only manage to capture the golden glare from it's exquisite foil wrapper.
And as for the books:
The Days Are Just Packed, a Calvin and Hobbes collection by Bill Watterson, featured here.
Fucked-up Fondues, by that spiteful cow Delilah Smythe, featured here.
neue mobel 6, by Gerd Hatje, featured at Mago's, here.
The Visitors, by Sally Beauman, featured at Ms Scarlet's, here.