Thursday, 26 February 2026

Wednesday 25th February 2026

Wednesday morning, and so up and about for a packed day.

After getting dressed and having coffee, I have to drop Jools off in town for her fitness class. Though I drop her off at the layby near the castle, where away to the left across the Channel, the coast of La Belle France is as clear as a bell.

I go down to the coach park to turn round, pausing to take shots of the castle, glistening in the rays of the just risen sun, before driving back up to the Duke of Yorks roundabout, along to Whitfield, before turning down the hill to River.

Dover Castle Kent is mostly chalk downland, and this is carved and shaped by the movement of water. Water caused by rain and snow melt, flows along valleys in winterbournes.

Dover's river, the River Dour, rises mainly in Temple Ewell, although that water flows from Chislehurst at least, to rise the flow along one of the town's valleys into the town.

Another branch rises along the Alkham Valley, near the hamlet of Drellingore, from which the winterbourne takes its name. This bourne is said by local lore, to only flow once every seven years, but in recent times has flowed more frequently than that.

The Drellingore floweth again We did pass that way on Saturday, I noted it's passage over farmland at the valley's lowest point, so would return to snap it in due course.

I park in the gateway of a field, the usual spot, and in the deep shadow of the down, take four or five shots before driving off to the next stop.

Next stop is Barham.

I go back to Temple Ewell, take a sharp left towards and through Lydden, and re-join the A2 heading towards Canterbury.

I turn off, towards Barham, take the narrow lane past the church, then onto the main valley road, past the village shop, parking on the main road near the bus stop, already busy with pupils waiting for their transport to the city and their high school.

Fifty six The Nailbourne is another winterbourne, a bourne at at Littlebourne a handful of miles to the north east, becomes the Little Stour, which then in time joins the Great Stour at Plucks Gutter.

St John the Baptist, Barham, Kent Mills were placed along the Nailbourne, towns grew up along the bourne, and at Barham, the bed of the Nailbourne is literally a street.

Kent County Council made regular updates last week as the bed of the Nailbourne filled, and the river flowed again, allowing people along its course to make arrangements.

It is quite the sight to see a lively and gurgling stream, nearly a river, flowing along a street, hemmed in by red and white plastic barriers. But this is normal. At least normal for Barham.

Further along, there is a gap between the barriers and walls of houses to allow a path to remain mostly dry, and so along this the residents can still come and go.

I take a few shots, then walk back along The Causeway, beside the bourne, back to the car, so to my final destination along the valley, Bishopsbourne.

It turned out that although the flow was impressive, it wasn't enough to close the fords into the village, the second ford had water in a culvert below the road, rather than over the road.

I didn't stop to take a shot, so instead turned back to the coast, and thoughts how to kill half an hour of time.

Down through Denton to Hawkinge, then avoiding the jams into Folkestone, I turned onto the A20 towards Dover, and when I reached Aycliffe, I turned up the cliffs to St Martins.

From St Martins Battery The rising sun caused stark contrast over the western docks, and the new customs facilities. I stayed half an hour, listening to a podcast, taking shots of the work underway.

From St Martins Battery I had things to collect from M&S, so drove down Military Road into the town, parking off Castle Street, and going to St James to collect a parcel for Jools, then going to a shoe shop to pick up a cheap pair of summer shoes to go away with.

Dover Castle from the St James's Development Finally, walk to Chapin's, to wait for Jools so we could have a breakfast, without cooking at home.

I get a table for two, order a pot of tea, and settle down to wait for Jools. People come and go, ordering scones, or a breakfast.

Jools arrives. We order our breakfast and a cuppa. We catch up on news, while on the next table, an American lady tied to explain what eggs "over easy" meant.

Breakfast came, and we were hungry, so we tuck in, and make the lovely fried food vanish.

Our next port of call was the wood behind Waldershare church.

Wild garlic, aka Ramsons, are a wonderful ingredient for sausages, and so the butcher at Preston said he would love some sweet young Ramsons leaves.

Which is why we were in the wood behind Waldershare church, walking down the long woodland track, down the slope, then snipping the young shoots.

Waldershare We soon fill a plastic bag, and I think that was enough as it was early in the season, so we take our swag and beat a retreat to the car, then drive along the Sandwich road to the coast, then over the marshes to Preston.

Mark was happy with our gift, but with us going away in three days, we take no gifts, and head back to Sandwich, then along to Whitfield to home.

Phew.

Back home we had a brew, so pistachio filled chocolates, and the question as to what to do with the rest of the afternoon.

Although sitting around eating chocolates is great, it seemed a shame to miss the warm sunshine outside, so I said I'd go for a walk.

My target was a small stretch of hedgerow at the top of the down, where Lesser Celandines show their glorious yellow faces. Only trouble was that to get there I would have to walk the muddy tracks, double so the places where water gathered and made the mud more than ankle deep.

Walk back to Windy Ridge I went up Station Road, beyond the four roads of the estate, past the war memorial and to the top track, dodging the cars and vans hammering along the road over the top of the down to the start of the track. And the start of the mud.

Truth was it looked worse than it was, with me having to walk along the very edge in only about three places, and the trainers I thought would be caked with mud, weren't.

Walk back to Windy Ridge Much.

I get to the stretch of hedge, and there were about a dozen spikes open, so i snap the best two, then set about walking to the track leading back down to Collingwood.

Thing about chalk downs is that rain and moisture seems through the nine inch soil to the chalk below, and seeps away. Even with heavy rain just a few days ago, the mud was firm enough, mostly to walk on.

Ficaria verna There was one spot I knew would be bad, a spot where the two tracks crossed, and the two fields above the crossing both drained down the track. Making a large mud bath.

Even this had a fairly dry path through it, so it was just past the horses in their paddocks, to the bottom of the small dip, then up the other side to Collingwood.

Tussilago farfara I walk along it to check on the colony of Coltsfoot, and was rewarded with two spikes showing. So I snap one, then walk to Station Road again, before turning along to Chez Jelltex where a fresh brew was called for.

It was four by then, and the warmth of the day was fading, so the heating was put on and the back door closed.

All ready for an evening of football.

Norwich were on TV, playing already relegated Sheffield Wednesday. On Wednesday. A huge potential banana skin for City, doubly so with the injury crisis. But City played well, scored twice in the first half, then cruised to another win, albeit with another potential season-ending injury to a forward.

Still, nearly safe now.

Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Tuesday 24th February 2026

Time is rapidly running out for us this week, as we are jetting off at the end of the week.

Although, I'm not panicking yet. I have clothes, camera, shoes and the rest, its just a case of throwing it all in a suitcase sometime Friday evening or Saturday morning, possibly the same time Jools takes the cats to their prison.

Spring has sprung Being a Tuesday, it is phys day. So up before the larks, and after coffee off to Whitfield to do a session.

It seems the new year surge has died out, so the car park and gym itself were not so busy.

I find a place to park, walk to the entrance, not as cold as other mornings this year, and upstairs to the bike.

I load a podcast and am off and pedalling.

And forty minutes later, I was done.

A quick dash to Tesco for some cash and some milk, then back home so Jools could jump in to go to her class.

She had a brew ready, which I happily accept. We chat, but then she has to go.

I make 90 minutes fritter away, by doing some freelance procrastinating, then Jools is back, and she had a couple of hours before she is to take Aunt Jan to Barham for a funeral.

Fifty five It was some distant family friend, and my presence wasn't needed.

So, I had a shave, shower, so am all nice and stinky when she came home.

The bright sunny start soon gave way to mist and cloud, meaning it felt colder than it actually was.

Instead I prepare potatoes and veg for chorizo hash, all ready to go when Jan dropped Jools off.

That was two in the afternoon, so I fire up most of the rings on the stove and get cooking. Forty minutes later we sit down to lunch/dinner, with plenty of golden crispy potatoes to go along with the peppers, onions and chorizo.

A bucket of hyacinths Lovely.

An hour of Bangers and Cash, and it was four in the afternoon. The sky cleared and there was a spectacular sunset somewhere behind Di's.

Football in the evening: Watford v Ipswich on the tellybox, and Newcastle on the radio. Who said men can't multi-task?

With the results obvious by twenty past nine, I head off up to bed, tired out by the tasks of the day.

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Monday 23rd February 2026

It is the last week in February, and there's a feeling Spring is just around the corner. However, as Prince said, sometimes it snows in April.

The day was cool and cloudy. But dry.

Which was nice.

First thing, Jools went swimming, while I went back to sleep until six and was only woke by Jools accelerating up the drive.

So I get up, get dressed and go down to make a coffee.

Birds were singing for the joy that spring brings. It will bring hungry mouths to fill for most, of course.

I had 90 minutes before she was back, so I watched some videos, listened to podcasts, but made sure the kettle was freshly boiled so she could have a brew once home.

Before taking her friend into Deal for coffee and a chat.

Despite being dry, there was a chill to the wind, and with better weather the next two days, I decide not to go out after all.

Fifty four Except into the garden.

Lunch was garlic chicken, stir fry and noodles, all done in about twenty minutes when she got back from Deal, by which time were was light drizzle outside.

We have music on in the afternoon, and the day slides gently towards evening.

We watch a wordy science program about missing matter from the universe, that and how come black holes got so big so early in the universe.

We understand some of it.

There was football in the evening: Everton v Man Utd, which on the face of it was good enough, but littered with mistakes by both sides, with Utd scoring the only goal with the best move of the match.

I had almost given up and gone to bed.

A family affair.

The Duke of Edinburgh used to call the Royal family "the Business".

A family that says it is dedicated to a life of service.

A life that is lived in a series of palaces, opening motorways, Royal "Tours" around the world, and for most Princes and Princesses, the only real vocation other than waving is to join the military.

Prince Andrew served with the Royal Navy before demobbing, then became a full time, whatever it is Pronces do to fill their days.

He married. Had children. Divorced.

And became a trade envoy for the UK, although no one seems too sure as to what a trade envoy does, and whether it is a pulic office or not.

Rumours began to circulate of a friendship with Epstein and his circle. Accusations were made of underage sex.

It went to coaurt, but under a plea deal his Mother, Queen Elizabeth II gifted Andrew £12,000,000 to pay his accuser off. Paid her twelve million to a girl he said he had never met, although photographs of them did exist.

But it did not go away.

The Epsten files show that Andrew, he lost the right to be called a Prince, stayed friends with Epstein after Epstein was released from prison after being convicted on child sex charges. And Andrew passed sensitive trade documentation as well.

Andrew is no longer a Prince, no longer HRH, was evicted from his multi-bedroom "cottage" at Windsor. He has now been arrested on suspision, not of child sex offences, but of misconduct in a public office relating to passing trade documents to Epstein.

A huge sex trafficing ring operated for years, suppling the rich and powerful with underage girls for sex and torture. So far, only a woman has been charged with offences relating to trafficing, and the President of the USA ignores the fact his name appears over 1.5 million times in the documents, and his Governments fail to obey the law in releasing all documents.

At the centre of all this, apparently forgotten by all, are the dozen, perhaps hundreds of girls and young womrn who were used and abused. When will justice think of them?

Monday, 23 February 2026

A short announcement

We are off on our travels at the weekend, so the blog will be taking an 11 day break.

I intend to write whilst away, so all our adventures will be documented, as well as lots and lots of pictures.

Anyway, so the last blog for a while will be on Friday evening.

Happy days.

Sunday 22nd February 2026

After the sunshine on Saturday, Sunday was to be damper and more suited for staying indoors,. So it was just as well there was a feat of football on the tellybox in the afternoon.

Being a Sunday, and there being no huge lunch to prepare, we go to the gym at seven, after drinking coffee and feeding the cats.

Sunday is the best day in the gym, only fools like us venture out at seven, so the equipment is pretty much empty, and even the radio turned down.

I listen to Bendy and Waldy's Adventures in Art while I peddle. I like them both, Waldy especially. Not sure discussing a visual medium on an audio only podcast works, but it is good to hear two experts, chewing the fat on the latest news. And top of the list was Michelangelo's Foot being sold for $27million, not the two million expected.

As Waldy pointed out, such sums could be better spent helping mankind, not feathering some rich bloke's man cave, or sitting in a bank vault for decades.

Oh well.

Back home at eight, for a morning of music as usual, and in time brews and breakfast.

I have a shower, and so all fragrant for the midday kickoff between the two Sheffield clubs: Utd and Wednesday.

Wednesday had to win to avoid being the club relegated earliest in any season in the history of the game. They put in a good showing, losing 2-1, not helped by conceding in the first minute.

Fifty three Then came Forest v Liverpool, which was heading for a 0-0 draw until there was a bizarre goal in the 96th minute, in off an elbow, to seal the win for Liverpool.

Finally, there was the North London Derby, men against mice, with Arsenal top of the league, and Spurs near the bottom. Would changing manager help Spurs to an unlikely win?

No.

Another 4-1 drubbing for Spurs, and so sink deeper into trouble.

At some point we had lunch: vegetables with the rest of the cheesy mustard sauce, pork pie, pigs in blankets left from the day before, and the reheated crispy bits from the beef also from Saturday.

It was wonderful, but we couldn't eat the pie, so that lives to fight another day.

And that was the weekend.

Again.

Next weekend will be very different indeed.

With the Beatles (1963)

With the Beatles was also released in 1963, a mere eight months after Please Please Me. And this was just a couple of months before Beatlemania hit the US.

It was released the day before news that JFK was shot reached the UK, 23rd was also the day that Dr Who first aired on television. So quite a couple of days in popular culture.

Like like Please Please Me, With the Beatles had several rockan roll as well as soul cover versions, and so had two less Lennon /McCartney originals due to an extra cover and the inclusion of the first George Harrison original.

It was recorded over the summer and early autumn at Abbey Road, between tours, and the sessions also produced the non-album single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand".

I have to admit to being underwhelmed by Please Please Me, and I think I might feel the same way about With the Beatles. We shall see.

"It Won't Be Long"
"All I've Got to Do"
"All My Loving"
"Don't Bother Me"
"Little Child"
"Till There Was You"
"Please Mr. Postman"

Side 2

"Roll Over Beethoven"
"Hold Me Tight"
"You Really Got a Hold on Me"
"I Wanna Be Your Man"
"Devil in Her Heart"
"Not a Second Time"
"Money (That's What I Want)"

"It Won't be Long" opens side one, and already there is an increase in maturity on show. The Paul and John harmonies are perfect, and instrumantation only has a slight nostalgic hint, it rattles along in a most pleasant way, and short enough (as most eatly Beatles tracks were), so doesn't over stay it's welcome.

"All I've Got to Do" opens mid-tempo, but builds to a more powerful creshendo leading tot he chorus, before repeating the trick again. The fade out, at forst I thought was the bridge, with McCartney humming, but fades to silence.

"All My Loving" arrives next, like an old familiar friend, which it is. This is, I suppose, "classic" early period Beatles, it is a wonder, really. What else can I say about a song that we all know so well, and an orignal that hints at the greater songs yet to come on subsequent albums and singles.

The George Harrison penned "Don't Bother Me" comes next. In what would be a familiar pattern, he gets just one composition per album here, and on most that floow. There's nothing wrong with it as a song, but is clearly second division when compared to "All my Loving". George also sings.

"Little Child" is a harmonica driven Lennon/McCartney original that seems to owe more to the past than it does lokking to the golden future that was soon to be theirs. That being said, that is me looking back, rather than hearing this at the time when surrounded on the radio with what passed as popular music. And remember, another self-penned tune, as all the first five tracks were. A remarkable achievement.

"Till There Was You" is the first cover on the record, and is very much in the mid-tempo camp once again. A gentle guitar lead song, with Pauls lament over the top. It's OK. But I'm getting to the point where only Lennon/McCarney originals will do. Maybe the next track will change my mind?

Over familirarity might be another problem, doubly so with a song with so many other versions out in the world, but The Beatles version of "Please Mr. Postman" might well be the best and the most well known. What is wonderful is the playful way the backing vocals play around Lennon's lead, and the backing track compliments the song. A fine way to close side 1.

Side 2 is cover version heavy, and another Ringo Starr vocal lurks there too.

There is only one version of "Roll Over Beethoven" you ever need, and that's Chuck's. That being said, after the poor opening guitar, it settles down ino a song The Beatles made their own, and I soon forgot the original. Of course, this is another the world and his wife i familiar with, and maybe for some fans at the time, the first time they might have heard the song. Made Chuck a few pennies too, I expect.

If I were to think of a typical early period Beatle song, it might sound something like "Hold Me Tight". Another Lennon/McCartney original, and is full of backing vocals, full musical backing and Paul's lead. Seems to me he loses note a couple of times near the end, but that's maybe the charm?

Almost certainly the first time I have heard their version of Smokey Robinson's "You Really Got a Hold on Me" , and another they put their own take on another's song. I don't think I have heard Smokey's version either, but seems a little odd hering a Beatle backing to a clear soul song. I like it, mind. And at a nat's crochet over three minutes, the longest track out of the 14 on the album. OK, just listening to the original, and I love the yearning in Robinson's voice.

Imagine having a good singing voice, and in a band with a recording contract, but having the fourth best voice. Of the two Ringo sung songs, one on each of the first two albus, I like them both. Maybe he's best suited to high tempto numbered, but I can imagine him singing, whilst playing, head nodding and air all a blur. Stays, does its thing, then leaves. Great. That's "I Wanna Be Your Man".

George sings lead again on the cover of "Devil in Her Heart". It features pefect backing vocals, even its not the most inspiring of songs, it does show how the band was now able to sprinkle Beatle magic dst on many different songs and make it theirs.

"Not a Second Time" is the penultimate track, and the last original. The Beatles now clearly have a sound, especially, for me, with the backing vocals. Always a pleasure, even in these early days of their recording career. This isn't their finest moment, but clearly them. A bit too slow for me, but what do I know?

Familiarity breeds contempt, it is said. Well, we all know "Money (That's What I Want)" in various version, co-written by Berry Gordy and Janie Bradford, though probably Gordy just wanted half the writing royalties. Probably. John is on lead vocals, it stretches it to near breaking point, a wonderous thing. With a percussion heavy backing its really is a fine way to close the record.

And to close this first part of their history, because after this it sets serious, glorious and wonderful.

Starts slow, but soon the band find their unique voice, and were on top of their (early) game.

An improvement on Please Please Me.