Friday, December 6, 2024

Christmas music # 4

 

The young gulls have finally shed their brown adolescent plumage and have made the transition into adulthood. There's a line of them sitting atop the lobster creels on the quayside. They ignore us with a level of disdain that only young seagulls can muster. There can be no doubting that they consider themselves to be the real rulers here.


After the excitement of the winter graduation ceremonies life has returned to normal. Much to the chagrin of the local hoteliers proud (and high spending) parents have dispersed to the four corners of the globe. Exams start today and the footfall on the path to the library is heavy long before the sun has risen. With the students hard at work revising ( which means no lectures and no lecturers ) parking is a doddle.


Posters reminding us to look after hibernating neighbours are much in evidence. We still don't have a Christmas tree but I've found the Christmas lights and baubles in the garage. The wine crate that contains the creche has been brought inside.


This mornings excitement - or what passes for it around here - is provided by a large truck which parks on the shopping street and disgorges a series of bulky  stainless steel contraptions. The fish and chip shop by the supermarket is having its kitchen upgraded. Old  fryer units are taken out and new, environmentally friendly ones, are installed. This technology upgrade, it seems, will 'scrub' the smell of cooking oil from the air and reduce the risk of unintended oil 'spills'. The fish and chip shop owner says they will be back up and running tomorrow.


Christmas music #4 . From Santa Cruz CA some Scottish winter sounds  :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gh8Xye_ZX0

Dogs :https://www.sciencefocus.com/news/man-and-dog-friendship


6 comments:

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari Om
Thank you for the waulking song... YAM xx

jabblog said...

The Christmas music is stirring and enlivening - thank you.

Lisa in France said...

Lovely music today. I also enjoyed your update on the young gulls. I have a weakness for audacious birds - gulls, jays, starlings and, here in France, magpies - birds with chutzpah.

Travel said...

I wonder if the wonders of St Andrews help convince parents to pay the tuition so they have a reason that they have to visit a few times.

Coppa's girl said...

Well done for finding the Christmas tree lights and baubles, but do you know where to find your sporran?

Jake of Florida said...

Had Alexandra Horowitz, the canine expert, been a professor at Barnard College (part of Columbia University in Manhattan) when I was there decades before, my life might have changed and I would have studied Dog instead of Russian history, language, and literature. Interesting what if!