Saturday, October 19, 2024

High tides and a Hunters moon.

We watch the latest episode of David Olusogas history series A House through time . Each programme looks at the residents of a particular house across the years. In this series the focus is on the inhabitants of a block of flats in Berlin and another in London :https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0jwkc2w.  Residents of the Berlin apartments include a Togolese chef, a school teacher and a Jewish war veteran. Episode 1 finishes in the mid 1930's and leaves the viewer at the stage where politics and the individual are about to collide. You want to shout ' Get out while you can !' The best thing we've seen in ages. The television we brought with us from France is beginning To show its age and the quality of the sound has become 'variable'. We shall head off into Dundee later today to look for a possible replacement.

Out on the beach we find that the high tides associated with this weeks  Hunters Moon have swept away the sand dunes. These had  been painstakingly restored by the beach rangers since the storms in March.  At the start of the week the dunes ran up to the edge of the fence. Now the fence is under threat.  I'd guess that in the last 24 hours another 5 feet have gone.


The fishmonger has cod, lemon sole and dressed crab. We're up early thanks to a low flying military aircraft heading out to check on Russians in the North Sea. Another aircraft follows ten minutes later and soon the sky is throbbing with the sound of Typhoons taking off from the airbase on the other side of the bay. 


The fishmonger also has some freshly landed halibut but we're all fished out and  decide to come back later in the week.


Half a dozen vans are about to set off into town to sell and  deliver todays catch. This is something you won't see in London.


Next week is revision week and a large percentage of the undergraduates are either heading home or heading off to the airport to catch  Ryan Air flights to somewhere warmer. First year medics will be trying to absorb the tsunami of information they've received in the last six weeks. When the youngsters get back the clocks will have changed , it will be dark by mid-afternoon and the town will have that Dickensian street lamp lit winter magic .


Remote and modern. Would you, could you, live here ?  :https://www.themodernhouse.com/sales-list/writers-house/

Scandinavian visitors have arrived. A sure sign autumn is ending :https://isleofmaynnr.wordpress.com/

This was interesting :https://www.semafor.com/article/10/15/2024/no-matter-who-wins-the-country-is-moving-to-the-right






9 comments:

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari Om
IoL home with views and no neighbours? Yes, I would and could... But not that one. A traditional bothy croft house for me...YAM xx

Virginia said...

No, no and No!! The views are breathtaking, but an enjoy my regular coffees with friends, the great independent bookshops I appreciate, and most of all the excellent health and hospital services at my doorstep - I'm in my 70s with numerous serious health issues, all controlled in a way they couldn't be if I wasn't close to our major hospital... oh, and I enjoy the native birds frequenting my backyard because I'm within a stone's throw of the Sanctuary fence. So, that's a NO from me!.

Lisa in France said...

"A house through time" sounds wonderful. I'm going to try to find it here. The linked article about America's moving right was interesting, although what is disturbing is that people's perceptions on some of these issues - crime, for example - don't match reality. I think it is harder to decide what is actually going on beyond one's own immediate experience with all the flood of media and propaganda.

Coppa's girl said...

I've watched most previous series of "A House In Time" and found them all fascinating. I haven't yet started to watch the latest one which sounds just interesting.
Much as I love the scenery surrounding the house, I wouldn't want to live in it. I find it unwelcoming and it has a bleakness about it, combined with the level of comfort found in a student flat!

Linda said...

Much arial activity here yesterday, near RAF Lossiemouth. Extremely noisy, of the type produced when the Typhoons are going straight up vertically.
Not watching much TV at all I wasn't aware of the House Through Time series, and must watch. It sounds a bit like the "miniaturist histories" of Gillian Tindall - do you know her books? I've read and enjoyed The House by the Thames, A Tunnel Through Time (about the Crossrail excavations), and have just taken Footprints in Paris out of the library. Also on my list is Celestine, Voices from a French Village. She has been decorated by the French government for her writing about France.

WFT Nobby said...

I took saw the latest David Olusoga programme this week and also found it exceptionally good. Very much looking forward to the next episodes.

Travel said...

A magical place.

Jim Davis said...

Typhoons out of Lossiemouth I would guess. Leuchars is no longer RAF?

Angus said...

You'd be surprised how busy it is.