The potato plants in the field by the gate have shot up in the summer sunshine. They are now all of two feet high and home to a dozen or so larks who rise, singing lustily, into the sky as we head down the farm track to the shore. Relative to their body size larks make a remarkable amount of noise. The bumper brood of goldfinches are also out in force again this morning. The young ones launch themselves from the stone field walls and scatter, inelegantly, in all directions as we drift into sight. They flutter fifteen yards before tumbling exhausted into the safety of the stalks of the barley field. Anxious mothers chivvy these small un-aerodynamic bundles of feathers along. For these chicks a day or two of intense flying instruction awaits. By tomorrow night they'll be proficient. The sound of the morning bird song always surprises us.
Graduation week is finally over. Friday afternoon saw the last of the ceremonies and the last of this years processions of new graduands. The piper and the mace carriers lead them out of the exam hall and down the street to the marquees where they are greeted by proud families. These are amongst those rarest of occasions when literally everyone is smiling.
A small mountain of champagne bottles piled up on the pavement outside chapel tells us that last nights celebrations went on for some time. Tonight is the night of the Graduation Ball. This is usually, to the shock and surprise of the more elderly and Presbyterian townsfolk, a 'Dionysian' affair.
The hidden side to tattoos :https://www.sciencealert.com/were-only-just-beginning-to-understand-how-tattoos-affect-the-immune-system
It's going to be hot in America :https://www.theclimatebrink.com/p/how-climate-change-influences-extreme
The book of Kells :https://x.com/patrickc/status/2072431833699267047
The courtesies that set Scotland ( or at least this corner of it ) apart :https://youtu.be/qj6tZS-Tv10?t=7032
Dreaming while awake :https://www.zmescience.com/medicine/mind-and-brain/you-can-dream-awake/