Thursday, January 23, 2025

The sound of geese

We always stay in One Devonshire Gardens in Glasgow but this time we're trying a new hotel. Having made ( and paid for )  the booking they've now started bombarding us with overly familiar e-mails along the lines of ' We so look forward to welcoming you both to our spectacular and lovely hotel. Feel free to let us know what we can do to make your stay here truly remarkable. We have options to make every occasion special '. It then offers a variety of expensive add-ons ranging from flowers, through chocolates and champagne, to what is described as a spectacular candle it dinner for two in a roof top pod overlooking the Clyde. Check-in we are told has been 'improved' so that personal interaction is optional. Instead we will be sent a text with the code for a locked cabinet that contains our key. The early vibe suggests this will be a one off 'experience'.

Before heading off to the station we have a leisurely walk on the beach. Wave after wave of geese pass by overhead. There must be five thousand of them heading noisily due south. We saw, and heard, the same thing yesterday. The dog owners pause and look up at this unfolding drama. The dogs are too interested in playing ball to notice.


The expected influx of golfing fathers now visible around the towns three streets. Today there's a dozen or so folks standing outside the pavillion waiting to tee off. Large Mercedes are lined up outside the club house.


The Christmas Shop is open early. Why it's open in January, or indeed any day before October, is a mystery. Can people really impulse shop for tree ornaments at this time of the year ? Do they do 90% of their sales in November or are sales spread evenly across the year ?


In the coffee shop by the fountain a young father is finishing off his Americano. As he leaves he nods towards the small sleeping figure in the push chair and silently mouths the single word " teething ".


Nothing to whinge about this morning when it comes to the security barriers around the ditch that's been dug for the restaurants new power line. The barriers have  been well weighted down ahead of tomorrows expected gale. The latest warning indicates that we'll see 100 mph gusts.


One of the souvenir shops has a sub genre of hear no evil, speak no evil animals. This morning they're joined in the window by knights in armour.





11 comments:

Liz Hamblyn said...

I am of an age that I appreciate a person giving me a key to my hotel room. Lock boxes are the work of the devil.

Anonymous said...

I’m looking forward to the unveiling

Lisa in France said...

The original hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil monkey carvings are at Toshogu Shrine in Nikko, about an hour north of Tokyo. Maybe it will be on your itinerary?

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari OM
Oooh, are you trying out a Leonardo's establishment? YAM xx

jabblog said...

We are heading for a contactless, robotic future . . . maybe.

paphosmuseum said...

Ha ha ha

Travel said...

One hotel brand is on my "no travel" list because of endless annoying emails, even after I called and asked them to PLEASE STOP!. It has been ten years and I have not been back.

Anonymous said...

100 mph gale winds will be something. We had 80 mph wind take out our wooden fence years ago. Batten down the hatches.
Nina

Coppa's girl said...

I suppose if you call your shop "The Nutcracker Christmas Shop" you can't really sell anything else other than festive decorations or nutcrackers, whatever the time of year!

Stephanie said...

Lovely picture of the morning sky and geese.

Anonymous said...

Very windy here at my home on the foothills of LA. My nerves are getting frayed. I wish I was hopping on a train go Glasgow later. Oh, well, I am going to Palm Springs this weekend. Guess I should check the weather! Have fun and eat well in Glasgow.