Saturday, 3 January 2026

Friday 2nd January 2026

It is the second day of the year, and was a Friday, so was a rest day. So, after four sessions in five days up to NYE, I thought a second day of rest before two sessions at the weekend would be good.

So, I would lay in.

Jools, however, went to the pool at six. I woke hearing the car going up the drive.

I assumed be hadn't been robbed.

So, got my self up, manoeuvring my body around the sleeping lump that is Cleo without waking her, got dressed and went down for coffee.

It was going to be a glorious bright and sunny day, but bitterly cold, and with each day now it will get ever colder before snow is due to flutter by on Tuesday.

I could have gone on a second plant hunt, but put that off to the weekend.

Jools came back at half seven.

What's the plan, she asked.

There is no plan, I replied.

OK.

So, we had a brew and breakfast, and the morning slipped past.

There was to be a craft morning at the library, but the cold weather and a bereavement meant it got cancelled, as did a trip to Faversham to meet a friend, as a family emergency had cropped up.

I think we were rather glad not to be driving there, or rather back in the dark on a clear frosty night.

So, we had nothing planned, and nowhere really to go.

I did go to Tesco for a few things. Jools said she'd stay home, so I ventured out at eight, before any traffic really built, and rushed round the store, now with a few empty shelves where Christmas used to be.

Two Back home, the shopping was put away and the bird feeders topped up. They squawked their pleasure at this, or anger as my slow work as they were hungry.

Who knows.

We had a pack and a bit of bacon, so I cooked it all in our super-wide grill, and made stuffed bacon rolls for lunch.

Which were nice.

And for the afternoon, we watched two documentaries: one on UFOs and the other on Coelacanths.

There were so Senate hearings a few years back about UFO sightings, and this looked at several famous cases, and was interesting.

Coelacanths had interested me since one was featured in the first series of Life on Earth, when the 400 million year old "living fossil" was first filmed alive.

Two ultra-modern submersibles dived off the coast of Sulawesi (where I have worked in my deep seas survey days), and they found a colony of at least eight of the ancient fish, and filmed them in super high definition.

Then eyes down for the quiz, which, for the first time, all sixty of us got the title of the LP with the first clue. I came 10th, due to my slow typing.

Finally, I made a batch of sausage rolls to use up the pastry, then made plum sauce spiced beef stir fry and noodles, which was very good indeed.

Outside, the Wolf Moon rose, and sone down ice cold light on the east Kent tundra.

Friday, 2 January 2026

Thursday 1st January 2026

Welcome to 2026.

As we went to bed well before Piano Blokey started up, and we were well asleep an hour late when the bells tolled to see out the Old and ring in the New.

New Year's first light Neither neighbours had a party, which sometimes happens, so our little corner of Kent was dead quiet all night.

By half six, dawn was beginning to show, and Jools said she wanted to go to the cliffs to watch the dawn. Did I want to come.

New Year's first light She had been up an hour longer than me, and I had barely had coffee, so I declined, so she went alone.

The New Year is going to be cold and frosty for the first few days, and maybe even snow at the end of the weekend. Jools didn't get out of the car, and was cold as she didn't take a coat, so was back ten minutes before sunrise at 07:59.

One So, I made her a brew and we had breakfast. Outside the sun rose in a clear sky, but was bitterly cold, though no breeze as yet.

Scully Which is why at ten, I went out for a New Year Plant Hunt.

I had intended to go further than the bus shelter at the top of Station Road, but the north-westerly blew down into my face, and even with a coat on, it was bracing.

Tanacetum vulgare So, having seen about ten species, I decided to turn for home, back down Station Road, looking sadly at the verges which a month ago were full of deadnettles and Shepherd's Purse, but one of the houses had mown the lot.

Borago officinalis I can't see why people want to do that, even in the depths of winter.

But they do.

I call in at Bev and Steve's to wish them Happy New Year, I was greeted by Steve in his dressing gown trying to keep their new puppy, Murphy, under control.

Valeriana rubra Over Christmas we had heard Murphy's whimpering, so had guessed.

Then back home where Jools made me a brew to warm up.

And then to the New year's Concert from Vienna, and what better way to spend New Year than waltzing round that fine city?

The Blue Danube brought tears of joy, what a wonderful piece of music it is.

And so, then, to the footballs.

After no football on New Year's Eve, there was a LOT of football on New Year's Day.

Euphorbia peplus A lot.

Blackburn lost to Wrexham in the lunchtime game, which we watched as we ate breaded chicken, stir fry, sprouts with bacon and grains.

Petasites fragrans It was OK.

Then Norwich were at QPR. Never a happy hunting ground, and live on TV to boot.

Smyrnium olusatrum The closeness of the double decked stands to the pitch made some of the angles really poor, but Norwich hung in.

Hedera helix In fact both teams were poor. Giving the ball away and misplaced passes.

Norwich took the lead one minute into the second half, and scored a second in the last minute.

Senecio vulgaris But that was too easy. Conceding a thunderbastard strike a couple of minutes later.

Lamium purpureum But City hung on.

Then came Liverpool v Leeds, which ended 0-0, followed by a choice of Sunderland v Citeh and Brentford v Spurs.

Bellis perennis Both of which also ended 0-0.

Happy New Year.

Mystic Jelltex rides again

Back in the days when we used to work, there was an almighty rush to get work done before Christmas. And when I was a Project Quality Manager, most years I would have to travel right up to the 22nd or 23rd of the month. Meaning that by the time we stopped working for the festive period, we were shattered.

And by the time New Year’s Day came round, we would be dreading the 2nd when we would return to work, and the madness would begin again.

But not this year.

We still were not ready. Better than in previous years, but Christmas still crept up on us, and it was a rush to get stuff done.

Today is January 1st, and tomorrow we do not return to work. There is no more returning to work, we just do what we want to. And with the meeting with the financial advisor before Christmas, we don’t really worry about money any more.

The plan is, that when the last one of us dies, there is no money, so no regrets, left.

I like a challenge.

We accept this, and will go forward accordingly.

So, what is planned for the New Year?

On the 28th February, we fly out with Jen for ten days on Cyprus, with seven of those days being an orchid tour. Some late winter sunshine is going to be very welcome. I will go out during the day with the group, orchiding, while Jools and Jen will go out in the hire car.

In July we will travel to the foothills of the Alps, driving down through France taking two or three days to meet up with another group for more orchiding. And seven days later, we will drive down through southern France, across the Pyrenees into Spain to witness the total solar eclipse, before driving back up through France.

At the end of the year, maybe go to Mexico for two weeks of culture and beaches. That is not yet booked, so we shall see.

As for 2026, for Norwich City.

The club has made a series of poor decisions on coaches and players, Johannes Hoff Thorup was sacked towards the end of last season, and then the club appointed Liam Manning, who was a very similar coach in terms of tactics, for the start of this season.

He was dismissed with the club next to bottom, and seven points from safety a couple of months back, and former Rangers manager, Philippe Clement, was appointed.

It might be the best appointment in two decades.

Or not.

The only issue is whether City will survive the relegation battle or not. We hope they will. One defeat in seven suggests some kind of recovery is under way. But these are very early days.

In the Premier League, it seems this might be Arsenal’s season. But we’re only at the halfway point, more than enough time to do a Devon Loch and fail on the home straight. They also head the league phase of The Champions League, but again, all bets are off once it gets to the knockout phase.

At the bottom, Wolves are doomed.

Doomed.

Burnley are also in deep trouble. And West Ham are too. I said at the start of the season, that the seventeen teams that survived last season, had at least three years of stability and Premier League prize money, and only gross incompetence would change the idea that all three promoted teams would go down. Sunderland have 28 points, and seem safe, meaning at least one established club will go down.

Come in Wolves, your time is up.

In the Championship, anything could happen. Coventry are top, but in a slump, and no team is promoted in January. If they start winning again, they should go up, as champions. But all to play for.

Are Norwich too good to go down?

Probably, yes. But that hasn’t stopped other teams from being relegated after being declared too good to go down. More wins, by any means, so we reach the 60 point safety line. Fifty might be enough, or might not. Ipswich are currently second, but lack consistency to made the second automatic play off spot theirs.

Other than that, who knows?

It is a World Cup year, but with tickets for the later games in the competition starting at three grand a pop, you’d have to be made to go.

As for Brexit: I won’t comment unless there is a move to more sensible policy, which is likely, but in small increments. Meanwhile, Farage stands on the sidelines, yelling comments that its all a betrayal, and only offering untested harder line policies. The press still laud him, and he is backed by the same billionaires who backed and profited from Trump.

The COVID inquiry continues, reveally what already knew, but with documented evidence, and yet those who caused tens of thousands of additional deaths or saw that Tory party friends benefited from the VIP lanes are unpresecuted, and the money that Michelle Mone, £144 million, was to pay back, has not, and her company has been liquidated. She is still a member of the House of Lords.

Not much will change in 2026. Sadly.

Wednesday, 31 December 2025

Wednesday 31st December 2025

I am writing this at half past eight on New Year's Eve, we have just finished watching The Italian Job, and after washing up, we're going to bed.

That's how rock and roll we are these days.

We scoured the TV listings, and there's nothing really to watch. The cats are fed and happy, so our job this year is done.

As the gym is closed tomorrow, which apparently is a Thursday, we're taking two days off from phys, before starting again on Saturday.

But we did go this morning, joining our types, the sort who are waiting at the doors when the sports centre opened at eight.

Three hundred and sixty five The day dawned bright, with clear blue skies, but just before seven, fog came down and shrouded everything. But at least the roads were quiet.

Once we had done our session and cooled down, back in the car to drive home for a brew and breakfast.

The fog did clear, and turned into a bright but cold day, with snow soon the way, possibly on Saturday and more on Monday.

Back home the magpies and crows were waiting for peanuts, so I filled the feeders and scattered some food on the grass, and they were soon eating.

I had a shower and shave, felt human again, and so thoughts turned to lunch.

Soup and some cheesy crusty bread, quickly warmed up, the take to the sofa to watch the Jaws at 50 documentary, which was very good indeed.

The afternoon slipped by, and after supper of party food and a baked camembert, back to the sofa for more Michael Caine, and then the year was just about over.

Time to wish all who read this a Happy New Year.

2025: How was it for you

The year, for us, was divided clearly in two. The part before retirement and the part where we had retired.

I won’t lie, at times it felt that the day would never arrive, but the final month was so rushed that I ran out of time to do stuff, and had to give my soon to be former employer some of my own time to return their equipment.

Jools loved her job and the excitement of it, she felt she made a difference. For better or worse, I felt I wasn’t making a difference, and trying to reconcile that with my job as a lead auditor was difficult.

The start of the year begins with promise. Promise of more light, more warmth, and for us, more time to do the things we would rather be doing other than work. Jools wasn’t sure she’d enjoy retirement, and neither did I, especially once the days begin to drawn in in the autumn and there is less to do outside.

But after more meetings with our financial advisor, we were assured that we should stay in Chez Jelltex, and just enjoy the ride.

Looking at my shots of the day project, the ninth year I have done this, January and February seem mainly to be taken up with looking for signs of spring: snowdrops, aconites and lesser celandines locally, and in woodland, bluebells, anemones and the such. And butterflies.

In work, my employer worked me hard to get best value out of me in those last 12 working weeks. I did a large number of audits, wrote the reports, presented the findings and followed up on them, as well as trying to close out findings from previous year’s reports.

I can say I did my best.

At the end of February, I went to Denmark on my last ever business trip. It was supposed to be in conjunction with yet more audits, but details never became clear, and it was agreed not to do them, and I was free to travel without much work to be done, as it was my grand farewell.

I had to fly via Amsterdam, giving me a layover long enough to get a beer and people watch, as I’m won’t to do. But at the airport, walking from the gate to immigration and back out again, it was clear I was not that mobile.

This was clearer when on my last day in head office, I could not stand for longer than a few minutes as my colleagues said nice words and presented me with gifts.

I used to walk round Aarhus, but on this final trip, I would walk from bench to bench, annoyed at myself for letting things get so bad.

On the plus side, I was able to meet several former colleagues on the Friday night, and again on the Sunday in Aarhus and Esbjerg, for a few drinks and a catch up, all of us knowing this was really the last time.

Between, I stayed at my friend, Shaggy’s, place in the countryside to drop off some Bovril, Marmite, pork scratchings and share a few beers. We served in Germany together back in the 90s, and it was a real bonus to meet up most times I visited Denmark for work.

Back home, and there was a rush to finish all the tasks for work, and to prepare for retirement. I had not had a private phone for over a decade, so had to buy one, and after much pressure from colleagues kept my old work number as they all said they wanted contact details. Even if almost none of them ever called, except when prompted by myself.

So it goes.

Spring was in full effect, the days letting longer and warmer too. On the Monday of my last week, I had an audit, and had to write the report and present it before I finished on Friday. This meant my frazzled brain struggled for two days with the detail, but my co-auditor helped out and it came together.

So that on the 21st March, I did my travel expenses. Presented the audit findings and had one last farewell meeting with my department colleagues. I had pressed to have a meeting with HR about why I was leaving, and to make sure lessons learned were, well, learned. But he only got back to me two hours before I was due to finish, so declined, and when the time came, turned the loptop off for the final time.

I went straight on a Zoom meeting with Danny Baker, and he was stunned when I told him the conversation was my first task as a retiree, as I had finished 30 minutes previously.

Two weeks later, we were due to go to India, so Sylv was coming down to look after the cats and cat sit, so I went up with Jen to collect her, and before we arrived at her place, I visited head office in Warrington for the last time to drop off my IT equipment and get witnesses that I cut up my company credit card.

I was free.

That night the three of us went to a pub for a slap up meal and a few beers, before the next morning, loading the car for the drive back down to Kent. Where Sylv stayed at Jen’s for a week before moving in as we left to meet the taxi near Sandwich, that would transport most of the group to Heathrow for our evening flight to India.

You can read of our adventures in posts from April, and pictures of the wonderful things we saw and did. But again, for me, a stark reminder of how unfit I was. I had uncerated legs, caused by bad circulation and retaining water. 24 days of inactivity in India, either on planes, buses or in jeeps meant we did little actual walking, and only made my legs worse.

It came to a head as we arrived back in Delhi, and as I walked up the air bridge, sores weeping on my legs, I went to take a deep breath, and there was no air to breath in. My heart was pounding, and I had no energy to walk to the top. I made it, but sat down. Jools taught me some breathing exercies to help bring my heartbeat down, but for the remainder of the trip, I was unable to do more than walk to the jeeps or along to our hotel room.

The tour was changed, partly, due to my condition, which hurt.

Once back home, I filled in a form for our GP, and he was so concerned, I had an appointment with him in half an hour as my symptoms were the same for heart failure.

Very serious stuff.

Thankfully, after arriving back, my breathing improved, and we began, slowly at first, to go to the gym.

The phsio, Ray, who we go to, told me what was wrong with my legs, and culd only be fixed by increase bloodflow, and cycling would do the trick, I knew.

So, starting from 15 minutes twice a week, I built it up two or three minutes a week until I could do forty, then as summer moved into September, at which point we realised how less busy the gym was at weekends, so suddenly we were going four times a week.

After a gym visit, my feet would shrink back down to normal size nines, but over the next few hours, fluid would return, and so on and on. Until the fluid did not return. My swollen legs remained thinner, to the point where Jools noticed muscles and tendons in them. Finally, the ulcers stopped. Just dried up and have not come back, at least for the last two months.

All my cargo pants are now too big, so we donated to charity or thrown in the bin, and jeans that had been hanging up in the wardrobe, unworn, were now brought back into use. I won’t pretend one or two pairs are tighter than I’d like, but I am sure they’ll get looser in a few weeks.

I also cut down on drinking. Christmas notwithstanding. I worked out, it wasn’t hard,, that I was drinking a lot of wine per week. Easy to do when it comes in boxes. The final straw came when I had a blood test in August, and I was diabetic.

So, I reduced by over half my alcohol intake, didn’t drink three days a week, and just had a small bottle of beer other days.

The other positive impact has been improved skin condition, and non-itchy scalp any more. All good news, and a reason not to stop what I’m doing.

As the weeks and months passed, we found more things to do, and found ourselves busy most days of the week, doing something. Easy when its spring and summer.

I joined the U3A, and created a group to go churchcrawling. After all, its one of the things I know a bit about. So, once every two weeks we meet up at a church I suggest, and I curate the visit and try to not get the group too bored.

They say they want to continue not just in the new year, but through next winter too. I just hope I don’t run out of interesting churches!

The one thing we did want to do this year was to renovate the kitchen. This is probably the most disruptive work you can have done in a home, and although the selecting wat we wanted at the warehouse showroom was great, as the week approached when work was to start, I began to regret it.

That was nothing compared to when after the first day, the kitchen and utility room had been stripped or everything, just the bare walls, and so there was no going back. The next day, the new electrical cables were embedded in the walls, and so began the two and a half week process of installing the units skeletons, and gubbins.

After then days, they were all in, and two guys came with a laser machine to measure for the worktops, which would take a week to cut to size. A week later, the tops were installed and the faca fitted, the sink and hob fitted, though the glue would take a day to set. So, some 13 days after work began, we had a sink and cooker with hob we could use.

Through the weekend, the walls were painted, this took longer than expected because as the weather changed towards winter, paint took longer to dry. But at the end of day 17, it was done. The guys left and we had our dream kitchen.

And that brings us to November, and the long, gentle slope towards Christmas and New Year.

Neither of us really miss work now. Well, that’s not true. We miss people, and maybe the problem solving and so on, but the freedom to do what we want when we want is intoxicating. And I don’t think we really want to go back to work, even if they could offer us enough.

I can have a hair cut any morning, not just Sundays. And if we want breakfast or lunch out, we go.

And same for orchiding, I can go midweek when there are less people about, or when the weather is fine, and rather go out the whole day, if needed a few shorter trips are done.

I could turn my attention to the wider world and its problems, but you hear enough of that on news broadcasts. Its as bad as anything I have known during my life, and only likely to get worse in the new year.

So there’s cheerful.

We didn’t go to the cinema this year, nor the theatre. And I saw just the one gig, The Wedding Present on a very warm evening in autumn at The Booking Hall, some 39 years and nearly three months after I saw them the first time.

We only bought one record this year, the new LP by Public Service Broadcasting, but then took me over 250 days to get round to play it.

I read a bit. Mostly non-fiction, but the final instalment in Phillip Pullman’s Book of Dust series was published and read. Not sure what I was expecting at the end, certainly not the one Pullman wrote. Still it was an enjoyable tome.

Little TV watched either, and no inclination to. It is now 16 years since I stopped going to sea, and my TV addiction never really returned. We watched some over COVID, but I soon grew bored and stopped.

Pretty much all I watch is football. Because it takes my mind of the shit going on in the world. I try to block most of it out, but am aware of the dreadful events in Gaza and elsewhere, which the west fails to stop, instead sells Israel more weapons.

I turned sixty in August. We had been planning events for a while. I say planning. It was more like talk about planning. The problem was, that it fell on Bank Holiday Monday, and everywhere was booked up years in advance.

And then the thought of spending hours in a hall with music booming out and having to dance, and it costing in excess of £1100 an hour for the privilege. We talked about it so long, we ran out of time, and the last minute plan to go to the Hoptomist for the afternoon was cancelled as Sean was working on his house instead, so could not attend.

It is also twenty years since I left the RAF. Five more years than I actually served. I did attend two ceremonies: one the unveiling of a memorial to those of our trade we lost at the National Memorial Arboretum, then to attend the Remembrance Day Parade past the Cenotaph in Whitehall.

So, in short, its been quite the year. One of the best,

wishing you all a very Happy New Year.

Tuesday 30th December 2025

It seems to have been several weeks since we had any rain to speak of.

Which may be odd for those in the north and west of the UK, but pretty much most storms that swept across the country did so in missing the south east corner of England, of which we are the most south east corner of.

Three hundred and sixty four So, awake at four in the morning, it was good to hear rain falling, meaning the soil would get damp and so not blown away if a gale did blow through.

And when we rose, the rain was still falling, revealing a downpipe had come away from the guttering, and was showring the upper patio with water.

That'll need to be fixed.

Anyways, after coffee we head to the gym to do another session. No gala on, so there just us gymrats and the swimmers heading to splash in the pool.

We went upstairs and did our time on the bikes, me listening to another podcast which perfectly lasted forty minutes.

Thing is, cycling didn't hurt my back, but the walk to and from the gym was pretty painful, and with the keen northerly in our faces, not pleasant. But I did no further damage.

Morning rain Which was nice.

And I am pretty sure its easing.

Or it could be the drugs.

The rain eased, but we didn't go out. Or I didn't. Jools went to Jen's to check on her heating, to make sure the house was warm when she comes back at the weekend.

I spend most of the day writing a blog post which will go up later on Wednesday.

Lunch was most of the leftover salt beef in rolls. The remainder and what was left of the roast beef was minced and I made two cottage pies to be put in the freezer for another day.

The day faded, so we ate cheese and crackers for supper, then there was football on the tellybox, the last games of the year, ending with Arsenal thrashing the in-form team, Villa, 4-1.

Tuesday, 30 December 2025

Monday 29th December 2025

There is an article in yesterday's Eastern Daily Press, that a Norfolk man is trying to sell one of these coins for £40,000, or a few quid over that.

Millions were made in that minting year of 2023.

We found two King Charles III pound coins in our change yesterday, so you have the pair for twenty grand.

Three hundred and sixty three Deal?

Anyway. Monday.

We are trying to get to normality, difficult when the gym doesn't open until eight, but Monday was a rest day, anyway, so no phys.

Instead we went to Tesco to get some much needed supplies.

Stuff. Coffee, muesli, butter, bread and yogurt.

That was £105.

And was a struggle to get round, as the day before I managed to knack my back tying the laces on my left trainer.

It had eased somewhat, but all chair designers seem to incorporate in their chairs, a part that presses right on the place where the pain was.

I was in no mood to do much. Other than laze around the house listening to music and or watching videos on that YouTube.

Jools went out in the car. I stayed back shifting uncomfortably in my office chair.

Talking of which, we tightened up the nuts and bolts on it later, and is like a new chair. At least the seat's not at a rakish angle now.

And so another lazy day betwixt Christmas and New Year played out. And not being a holiday, there wasn't any football until six in the evening.

Lunch/dinner, eaten at just after two, is hash, made using another new frying pan, after I gave up with the stainless steel one. And no issue with the non-stick. I figured we have so much forever chemicals inside us, another non-stick pan can't do much more damage.

Anyway, the potatoes not only didn't stick, but we all wonderfully crispy, so I dished up and we ate well whilst listening to Desert Island Discs.

And then football: top of the table clash between Coventry and Ipswich, which was a fine game, won by Town 2-0, meaning they had put five past the Sky Blues in two games this month, with no reply.

Then, Norwich not on TV, so I follow via the radio, and are undone by a last minute goal against Watford at home.