Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Burly visitors.

 

The American President is due in Scotland at the end of the week. The town suddenly full of 'burly' young American men with short haircuts and serious unsmiling faces. We assume they are a Presidential 'advance' party and are here to acclimatize by playing a few rounds of golf.

The sheep grazing down by the golf course are blithely unaware of impending visits and world events. They are simply happy with the wild flowers in their field. One pauses, briefly, to watch us as we wander by.


Angus pops into the local Kurdish barber for his monthly haircut. The barber asks 'What you want ?' I explain and he pretends to listen. Some routines never change. The end result is always exactly the same. I note that inflation has hit the hair cutting industry. What used to be £15 has suddenly risen to £20. In addition to the Kurdish hair dresser the town also has a variety of barbers that serve the student demographic.  Angus avoids them because they are a) much more expensive b) have Stygian lighting and c) employ trendy staff with alarming nose piercings who gyrate to Charli xcx's latest sounds while they work. 


Mist and drizzle this morning. This is typical weather here in July and August. May and September tend to be sunnier and drier.

11 comments:

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari OM
The sheep in the field is such a blissful image: a balm for the turmoil suggested by the first pic! YAM xx

Lisa in France said...

I don't suppose that Trump would himself play the course at St. Andrews, as he usually prefers his own. The VP seems to play some golf, but hopefully he will remain in the Cotswolds and leave you all in peace.

Linda said...

Blissfully empty St Andrews streets. We were in town later yesterday, by which time it had cleared up and filled up. A fruitless mission to the St Andrews recycling centre with the cardboard bike box in which our very new son in law of this week had had his bike transported from New Zealand" "Have ye booked, pal? Ye need tae book wi' a van" (we were in our Mercedes van, indispensable when daughter and now son in law come home for a visit). More successful stop at the Oxfam shop to deposit a stack of novels in French that our local Oxfam would baulk at. We spent the week, when not celebrating the civil partnering, chasing a decent cup of coffee in St Andrews and round about. A truly undrinkable one in Cupar, an almost undrinkable one in St Andrews, on South Street, an iffy one but I finished it because needs must at the place with the green sign and a name beginning with T on North Street down towards the golf shops, a good one at the Beehive in Crail and at a place in Anstruther, and a pretty decent one at the Crail Harbour Gallery and Tearoom.

Anonymous said...

The sheep look dressed for cold weather!

Angus said...

I sympathize but am not surprised. We've sadly discovered that the best you can get is at Starbucks. That's doubly true for a decaf espresso. Why coffee should be such a challenge is a mystery. 'The Font' thinks it's all down to cost cutting and the use of robusta beans. The shop on South Street used to use Illy now they've downgraded to something memorably dire.

Angus said...

It is rumoured the VP is on his way to Scotland after the Cotswolds. Presumably this is some strange act of fealty.

Travel said...

Sorry about the visit, it will make a mess of things. If he was not president, would Britain allow allow a convicted felon in?

Angus said...

Well, he's coming back in September to stay with the King so I guess the answer depends on who you know.

rottrover said...

The VP and his wife were boooo'd out of a venue in San Diego recently. I'm sure the Scots are more polite.

rottrover said...

PS: The sheep are almost as cute as Puppy! And we don't want her ground up!

Anonymous said...

A lovely good day to you and the Font!