Eight o'clock on Tuesday night and a large cruise liner appears out at sea. Seen from the garden it seems to be oddly tall but not very long :https://www.oceaniacruises.com/ships/marina. Until recently cruise ships rarely if ever ventured this far North but last year we noticed a marked uptick in the number of liners en route to Dublin and the Orkneys. This year there seems to be even more of them. Guess the cruise lines are rescheduling away from the Eastern Mediterranean. We, and a group of villagers, stand on the farm track and watch the ship sail twinkling majestically by. You take your excitement where you can find it.
Wednesday morning. I find a parking space for the little BMW by the bookstore. Within 30 seconds a ferocious looking gull lands on the wee cars roof . I think of shooing it away but it gives me a look that says it's not to be toyed with.
Singing whales :https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-cold-wars-accidental-whale-observatory/
A craving for company :https://knowablemagazine.org/content/article/mind/2026/why-we-crave-social-interaction
Not all book festivals are created equal :https://snyder.substack.com/p/waiting-for-the-missiles-to-pass
This lady doesn't seem to have enjoyed Scotland :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQlgN9w0BsU
8 comments:
Hari Om
Thanks for the article on whale song... and the image of foreign tourists forgetting which country they are in. Somehow that was deeply moving... YAM xx
Build a cruise pier and they will come.
Darndest or Darn-it are still much in use around New England as politer substitutes for Damndest or Damn-it. Supposedly originated in Puritan times when one could be arrested and/or fined for cursing. Damn-it is still considered a mild curse word in these parts. Assuming the American observers were "of an age", they probably, like me, grew up hearing the swap out.
Overall, Miss inaugural flight traveler to Scotland seemed to enjoy her trip but was just being honest. As many of us have experienced, there are wonderful aspects to "winging it" when traveling and other times when one has to ponder what the hell was I thinking.
Loved the gull photos. Too bad that the German tourist “forgot” which side of the road needed to be observed.
JoAnn in Maryland
Yes, the fierce gull is great! Isn't it strange how things go AWOL on a move. We're still trying to figure out what all was in one of our boxes that clearly didn't make it to France.
I like your kind of excitement. Was a glass of wine in hand as the ship passed?
Yes - and a number of our neighbours enjoyed a palatable Pouilly-Fuisse with us.
Cool seagull photo!
Post a Comment