Thursday, October 30, 2025

Curlews .

Sixty, maybe eighty, curlews take off from the field by the Heron Pond and head towards the safety of the hay bales that the farmer has piled up in the barley field. As we get closer their skittishness kicks in and they do the same route but in reverse. We've never seen so many curlews at one time. Their undersides glow bright white when they wheel and catch the sunrise. To us, and presumably to the folk who lived here over the last two or three thousand years , they look like so many small plump angels.  The cormorants drying their wings on the safety of the sharp rock outcrops are decidedly unskittish. They don't even deign to look at us. The little village we call home is quiet by human standards but is the equivalent of the I-95 for avian travelers. 


It's one of those 'wannabe student' days and Starbucks is already busy with mothers and offspring. Fathers are notable for their total absence. Presumably after a long drive up from the airport they are in bed 'recovering '.  Conversations about modules and tutorial sizes spill across the tables. An intense family from Rickmansworth discuss class size with an equally intense family from Melbourne. One lad with the 'supremely' bored ennui of a seventeen year old perks up when he hears that this coming year females are likely to comprise 60% of the undergraduate intake. You can see him doing the math. We are impressed by a woman in a blue gilet and a Hermes headscarf who has planned out the days schedule to the minute. She even has a clipboard with an itinerary of all the things that 'simply must be done'  on it. GLWT!


Yesterdays orange Halloween cake has been replaced by a creation with spiders cobwebs piped in icing across it.


Less successful is something green and ghoulish. I'm not sure I'd feel entirely comfortable seeing that on the lunch table.


Some of the houses in town don't have back gardens. Instead they have their gardens on the other side of the road in front of them . It seems odd to cross the road to get to your lawn and flower beds. In one of the front gardens a large holly tree is bearing a heavy crop of berries. Yet another sign a hard winter lies in store ?

Opening words of every European anthem :https://x.com/TerribleMaps/status/1982056540963217518

Self defeating behaviour :https://www.aei.org/foreign-and-defense-policy/trump-ill-work-with-china-not-canada/

Differences between the UK and US :https://www.commonreader.co.uk/p/the-american-art-of-being-busy

Thoughts on living in NYC :https://x.com/david_perell/status/1982957338173509727

Swedes study spaghetti :https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/new-study-reveals-innermost-secrets-spaghetti

4 comments:

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari OM
Perhaps, given the subject matter, the second cake is more successful than you give credit! Given how the temps have plummeted this week, I suspect that winter is well inbound... YAM xx

Lisa in France said...

The Halloween cakes are much more creative than the constantly repurposed biscuits. Our local supermarkets in France seem to be trying to make Halloween a bigger thing here, but the decorations are surprisingly gruesome - at the entrance to our local Carrefours, there is a bloody ghoul with a chainsaw positioned over the Haribo display. The piece on New York was perceptive. I could relate to No. 20 (the perception that NYC is the entire world), as I had a bad case of that as a young lawyer. At that point, Tokyo also worshiped New York, so never realized there were other points of view until I moved to a San Francisco-based law firm and received a shocking comeuppance.

Camille said...

Such interesting links this morning. Being Celiac for the past decade or more, I could have saved the researchers a great deal of time and bother...use less salt or none at all especially when cooking GF pasta. Sheesh.

The NYC link and "busyness" of America article tugged at my heart. All so very true. Time to plan our next trip to the big apple and also visit family who live near Gettysburg.

Travel said...

Always learning, I now know what a gilet is, and Good Luck With That.