We wander out to see the standing stone that the farmer has unearthed . The New Zealand and Canadian families are already there. You grab your excitement where and when you can in a small Scottish village on the North Sea. The farmer tells us he was happily ploughing when 'clang' one of the blades hit something unexpected. The 'clang' in the sentence is stressed for effect. There's one large block of rock about five feet long and four feet wide. Next to it a wider , tapered, portion that's sheered off and is maybe three feet long. Smaller pieces have fallen off as he's dragged it over to the field boundary. The farmer thinks its a standing stone. 'How would you know ?' asks the Canadian man. The farmer, perhaps rather brusquely, points out that it's the only stone in a field of deep sandy soil. The Canadian man seems unimpressed. His four year old is fascinated.
Later today the local policeman will dutifully meet with the local archaeologist to certify that the bones that were unearthed aren't from a recent murder. The policeman will 'tut' to make it clear he has better things to do than supervise bronze age excavations.
At auction in Glasgow. Someone wanted to record their family dog :https://www.mctears.co.uk/auction/lot/lot-73----marion-rodger-hamilton-harvey-scottish-1886---1971/?lot=407296&so=0&st=&sto=0&au=1908&ef=&et=&ic=False&sd=0&pp=96&pn=1&g=1
Very French :https://x.com/francesafetytra/status/2036184875980693781
Coffee is good for you :https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/21/turns_out_your_coffee_addiction/
China and science :https://scholarstage.substack.com/p/china-and-the-future-of-science
1 comment:
Hari OM
That's certainly a muckle lump of stone. It will be interesting to hear the archaeologist's views on that and the bones.
That's a reasonable estimate for the Sealyham painting - is Angus tempted? YAM xx
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