Part 56 – Whitewash and Sleaze

“Comments about the slave trade being a ‘Caribbean experience’, as though it’s some kind of holiday… (is) completely out of kilter with where British society is” (Halima Begum)

Coming Unstuck

Mythical Stone

A return of the stiff neck made it hard to get going Monday morning. However, I persevered with exercise, blogging and chores.  Taking the recycling out, I exchanged pleasantries with neighbours.  The young mum in the next terrace was in the community garden.  I complemented her efforts to clear it up after 2 years of neglect.  A woman from across the street joined me at the bins, commenting on the strong wind.  I agreed it was rather blustery in spite of the sunshine.  As the wind dropped mid-afternoon, I pottered in the garden.  Three old pals I didn’t know were mutually acquainted, came walking past.  We compared thoughts on coping with lockdowns, vaccines and the self-entitled government.  “We’ll never get rid of them now!” we concurred.  In the evening, an Ocado delivery arrived bang on time.  It was good to be able to return carrier bags but they gave me a ridiculous number back, including 2 containing 1 item each!

The Daily Plague briefing was broadcast from the new press office, complete with union flags.  Pat Valance presented data showing a drop in Covid hospitalisations from 30 to 6 per 100,000.  The ‘stay at home order’ for England was replaced by ‘stay local’.  We could meet in groups of 6 and do sport outdoors.  Cock didn’t rule out foreign travel in summer even though he’d already booked his UK holiday.  Scientists weren’t keen.  Prof. Dame Anne Johnson, UCL said: “I’m for staycations.”  Prof. Sir Mark Walport of UKRI* intoned: “the numbers (in Europe) speak for themselves.”  A Panorama report on the Milton Keynes Lighthouse mega-lab discovered PCR tests in a gloopy mess.  Belying predictions it would be there for weeks, the Ever Given came unstuck from the mud thus unblocking the Suez Canal..  Nevertheless, they’re gonna need a bigger canal!

The thermometer reached 25 Celsius, making Tuesday officially the hottest March day since 1968.  Struggling to come round, I took it slow with gentle exercise and a bath before we set off on a rare trip to the nearest moor, via town for pasties from the bakers and to catch a bus up.  Although we’d not visited for some years, we remembered the route and soon reached the ridge dotted with mysterious archaeology.  Sitting near a standing stone to eat our pasties, huge sheep approached and stared us out so we didn’t linger.  After exploring the landscape, we were fairly certain of the way down but double-checked with an energetic-looking couple striding along.  When it looked like our path was barred, Phil insisted we had to climb further up.  As we huffed and puffed, a Tornado jet came so close I ducked!  I then spotted a jogger jumping a stile below and gleefully headed down the slope.  As we reached the road, a bus sped past.  We continued down to the country inn, looked into a friend’s garden to see if she was home and fell into conversation with the couple we’d seen on the moor.  It turned out they now ran the inn and gave some gen on arrangements for re-opening and using the erstwhile pig field for extra outdoor seating.  On telling us where the pigs had gone, we said “They’ve probably been turned into sausages!”  Very thirsty, we squatted on the wall opposite to drink from our bottles.

“Is this the right place for the bus?”  asked Phil.  “No. I don’t know when the next one is. We can go up to the corner if you want.”  At that moment, one trundled along the road.  “Shit!”  We gathered our stuff and tried to run but it was useless.  Moodily, we walked down.  In spite of being tired, dehydrated and at risk of heatstroke, we quickly reached town.  An old biker we knew drank tinnies with a mate near the closed market.  He asked us for prints of photos we’d taken of his barge adornments the other week.

After a  quick call to the convenience store, we wearily trudged home.  My bad ankle had been playing up on the tussocky moors and I subsequently developed sharp knee pains. Still in a huff, Phil blamed me for missing the even though I didn’t know the times back.  I made a mental note to check next time so we didn’t come unstuck.  (for a fuller description of the walk, see Cool Placesi).

That night, I dreamt we went on holiday to a gammon hotel where I had swimsuit dilemmas.  I took it as a message to check my old ones still fit.  Having lost weight in the 2 years since I last wore one, I could come unstuck in the pool!

A Nice Day for a Whitewash

Black and White Blossom

The milestone of 150,000 Covid deaths in the UK, actually reached 18th March, was only just released by the ONS due to a ‘data lag’.  However, half the population now had antibodies.  A much-anticipated WHO report on the origin of the Wuhan outbreak concluded the virus most likely jumped from bats to another animal, but didn’t specify the pangolin.  To guard against global supply issues, Novavax would be processed in County Durham, while 24 countries committed to the idea of a treaty for the next pandemic, based on WHO principles.  China and the USA notably absent, Dr. Tedros expected all to sign up during negotiations.  The Met unsurprisingly exonerated after an investigation by the police into the Clapham Common debacle, they admitted it was a PR disaster.  The report revealed 1,500 anti-lockdowners turned up at the vigil including Piers Corbyn.  Brexit pub chain Wetherspoons planned to invest £145m on new pubs and upgrades after lockdown, including Newport Pagnell.  Was there anything there apart from a motorway service station?  Melvin Bean was adamant the Leeds festival would go ahead: “I’m  taking the PM at his word.”  We’ll see about that, Mr. Bean!

Achy after Tuesday’s walk, we stayed round the house on Wednesday.  Warm with sunny spells, it was a nice day to hang washing on the line, which I did for the first time this year.  After lunch, I got stuck trying to come up with titles for the next journal entry, developed head fug and had to stop.  Looking grimy in sunlight, we dusted the living room and Phil fetched the analogue clock down from behind the telly to get it going again.  Stopped for months, it was strange to hear the tick again.  I arranged some twigs to hang Eastern European eggs on and placed mad chickens round the hearth.

The number of second jabs given in a day exceeded first doses.  How long immunity lasted, the chances of re-infection and the impact of variants, were all still unclear.  However, scientists said the vaccine provided ‘optimal chance’ of effective anti-bodies.  Germany allowed use of AZ on over 60’s only while Macron apparently ignored scientists, considering himself an ‘expert’.  Spain announced that masks were required on all beaches throughout the country (count me out!)  UK citizens wasted no time enjoying the spring heatwave, descending on public spaces and leaving piles of litter in their wake.  Councils closed parks.  Launching on the LSE, Deliveroo shares tanked by 30%.  Leading fund managers such as Legal & General and Aviva rejected the listing over issues with the company’s business model, workers’ rights and regulatory concerns.  A scrap metal yard fire in Sheffield would rage for days.  How on earth did metal set ablaze?

The Commission for Race and Ethnic Disparities (Crud) report led by Tony Sewage, was a complete whitewash.  It found the UK was an integrated society with no institutional racism and the system not rigged against minorities.  No surprise with the Crud team hand-picked by fellow denier Munira Mirza.  Among its recommendations were increased scrutiny of police footage of stop and search, more ethnic minority recruits and training.  Roundly condemned, Halima Begum of Runnymede Trust railed: “Frankly, by denying the evidence of institutional racism and tinkering with issues like unconscious bias training and use of the term ‘BAME’…they’ve insulted every ethnic minority in this country – the people who continue to experience racism on a daily basis.”  She added: “comments about the slave trade being a ‘Caribbean experience’, as though it’s some kind of holiday… (is) completely out of kilter with where British society is.”  Dr. Sewage responded that suggesting the report was “trying to downplay the evil of the slave trade (was) absurd.”

Labour said the conclusions were a ‘divisive polemic’ and downplayed institutional racism.  Unions called it ‘deeply cynical’ and said it denied black workers’ experiences.  NHS providers claimed there was ‘clear and unmistakable’ evidence that minority ethnic staff had worse experiences and faced more barriers than whites and that denying links between structural racism and health inequalities was ‘damaging.’  They demanded concrete action to tackle bias and discrimination across public services.  Sam Kasumo resigned as a top government ethnic minority adviser; Downing Street of course downplayed  a connection.

No Jokes, Sleaze; We’re British

Pussy Willow

The Guardian’s report of building another Suez Canal sounded like a great idea.  We had visions of a holiday pootling about on small boats while container ships used the bigger one.  Alas, it was an April Fool’s joke.  The weather was no joke.  Grey and cold, a nithering easterly made it feel like winter again.  I hurried to town where pussy willow hung over steely waters near the old bridge.  The market packed with wandering hippies and not distanced gammons, I waited ages at the fish van and almost kicked a wanker behind in the queue as he edged uncomfortably close.  At the toiletries stall, a woman gassed to the stallholders, making paying awkward.  On the way home, I paused to take pictures of a beautiful white cherry tree in the carpark.  A passing old man smiled at me: “Isn’t it lovely!”  “Yes, but I’m not sure it’ll come out on my photos.”  Actually, they weren’t too bad and leant themselves to monochrome rather well (see above).  Working on the journal, I came up with headings and declared the first draft done at long last.  I experienced another odd night, struggling to get to sleep for ages and then waking very early.

Mainly immunised, vulnerable groups no longer needed to shield.  A BMJ report found only 1 in 5 people with symptoms requested a test, and the effect of TIT ‘limited’.  Matt Cock was ‘very worried’ that 13.7% of those affected by the virus had long Covid.  Layla Moran said it should be treated as an occupational disease and appropriate support given.  Vaccine hesitancy dropped from 44% to 22% among ethnic minorities in spite of claims it broke upcoming Ramadan fasting rules (it didn’t); possibly thanks to campaigning by Lenny Henry and other celebs.  France shut down schools, shops and non-local travel.  Brazil borrowed £665m for vaccines and health care.  Trials in the USA declared the Pfizer inoculation 100% effective on 12-15 year olds.  It was later found equally effective in South Africa and to prompt a huge immune response on all variants.

Liberty Steel boss Sanjeev Gupta insisted he wasn’t closing plants.  Owing billions to now-failed Greensill Capital, he was refused a government loan – they reportedly hadn’t ruled out nationalisation.  Links to David Cameron emerged.  Lex Greensill acted as an adviser to the former PM and subsequently, Cameron worked for Greensill, lobbying for Covid contracts on his behalf.  The Office of Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists cleared him of wrongdoing because as an employee, it didn’t formally constitute lobbying.  Labour’s Dodds and Reeves repeated demands for an inquiry.  In the olden days, we called that type of thing sleaze.

Easter in White

Easter White Cherry by Phil Openshaw

Good Friday started cool but as the sun re-appeared, became much nicer than forecast.  I failed to sleep in to make up for crappy nights and did free puzzles provided by Metro in lieu of news.  No Pace Egg play for the second year running, Phil declared it a normal workday and was kept busy for much of it (strangely,  a lot of gig work seemed to come on a Friday). Concocting a slightly different version of Aussie chocolate fruit cake, I almost forgot to add eggs and made a right mess spooning the gloopy batter out of the tin to re-mix it.  But it turned out okay.  While it was baking, I worked on a very slow computer, had coffee and stuffed a fig roll in my gob when there was a knock at the door.  A volunteer from the local covid support group stood outside with an Easter treat bag of yellow and white daffodils, a chocolate egg and a cute card courtesy of school kids.  How nice!  Expressing thanks, I apologised for talking with my mouth full.  “That’s alright. Fig rolls are my favourite.”  “Sorry, it’s my last one.  If I’d known you were coming…”  “You’d have baked a cake.”  “I’ve got one in the oven right now. Come back later!”  I wrote up Tuesday’s walk for Cool Places and watched a suitably seasonal film.  King of Kings was now so ubiquitous I could recite the dialogue.  Phil cut his hair and cleaned the bathroom while I coated the cake with chocolate, properly melted this time,  buttons, jazzies and mini eggs.  On sampling, I asked Phil how it compared to the one I made for his birthday “I like marzipan.”  Hmm!

As the Scottish ‘stay at home’ order was replaced by ‘stay local’. National Clinical Director Jason Leitch rambled on BBC Breakfast about the different rules of the 4 nations and dithered over answers on when we could travel freely around the UK.  It was no surprise the so-called expert struggled with a maze of regulations across the UK.  In Scotland, 4 people from 2 households could meet, outdoor non-contact sport, group exercise and communal worship (by up to 50) was already allowed.  In Wales, the ‘stay local’ order was lifted on 27th March permitting travel across Wales for the Welsh only, 4 people from 2 households were already allowed to meet and outdoor sports facilities had been open since 13th March.  In Northern Ireland, 6 people from 2 households could meet outdoors and 10 from no more than 2 households could do outdoor sport (including golf but not go into club houses).  I doubted the Belfast rioters took any notice.

3 p.m. by the time I’d finished a series of niggly jobs Saturday, I felt glum being stuck indoors.  For the second day running, it was much sunnier and warmer than expected, although some areas did experience a white Easter.  At least I caught a some rays with a trip the co-op.  As I headed back, Phil headed out to the convenience store.  Differing requirements meant we’d had to split the shopping which irked me until he returned with an armful of roses!.  It prompted us to finish cleaning the living room to make room for a vase and more mad chickens.  Afternoon telly dreadful, we listened to music instead.  I finally finished the Easter card I’d made him, but had a right faff printing it out.

Bunting for Jesus

Sunday started badly with a coffee pot disaster.  The plunger of the cafetiere fell apart, promptly sinking into the hot liquid.  What a palaver!  Thankfully, Phil came to the rescue.  Things improved as we exchanged gifts.  I gave him the homemade card and an egg containing a mini bunny.  On top of the roses, he’d got me prosecco truffles and made me a digital art.  ‘Easter White Cherry’ represented a much better version of the blossom in the carpark than I’d managed.  Early sun consumed by cloud, we ventured out regardless to pursue Phil’s mission to photograph more blossom.

Out on the street, a young neighbour washed his car after it got egged by kids.  “The only egg I’ve had,” he wailed, “but I was a little bastard myself once.”  “Well,” I observed, “there’s not much entertainment at the moment. They have to make their own.”

We crossed the main road, amused by bunting hanging in the Methodist church’s garden.  “It was only a matter of time before Jesus and the egg came together,” Laughed Phil.  Climbing above the canal, we espied angry geese chasing an interloper, a disturbing leprechaun effigy and a family trying to navigate ruined houses.  Further up, a woman and girl looked for a celeb grave.  “You’re on the wrong side of the valley.”  As I gave directions, their dog barked ferociously and strained at the leash at the sight of a cat.  Grateful it was on a lead, we continued to find colourful spring flowers, blossom and fencing.  A group chatting took up the pavement and half the road, forcing us to cross.  Descending near the station, the catkins of a tree growing out of a wall turned from furry to fuzzy.  In the park, a delighted family posed below cherry trees.  “They’ll be on Insta pretending they’re in Japan rather than West Yorkshire!” I joked.   The delicate petals waved about in gusty draughts, making them very difficult to photograph.  Phil berated himself: “what a stupid day to suggest a blossom mission. I might come back on a less windy day.” “You’d better be quick. It doesn’t last long.”  In front of the café, families picnicked very close to the path as a large line snaked towards the serving hatch.  We popped in the town centre shop, warily approached the white cherry in the carpark and gawped at people queueing at a plethora of smoky street food stalls, dawdling coffee-cuppers and a crowd in the middle of the pedestrian street dancing and singing along to a busker.  “That’s all you need for a festival – a man with guitar, a kebab and a can of beer!”  “It’s such a contrast to last Easter during lockdown 1. Do you remember dancing in traffic-free streets?”  Meanwhile, Elder Sis posted pictures of her walk through a deserted central London.  Thinking the world had descended on our little town, I later discovered there’d been a Kill the Bill demo (and also in Birmingham and  Bristol, with inevitable crowds and arrests), so maybe all the Cockneys were in Finsbury Park.

Back home, Phil wrangled the bread without touching the wrapping at all like a total ninja so we could have butties for lunch.  I was shocked that I’d taken tons more photos than on a country walk.  Many featured blurry blossom and went straight in the bin but I found inspiration for a haigaii.  At bedtime, an incredibly loud wind whipped up the second my head hit the pillow.  It took some time to drop off.  I dreamt I was pregnant but in denial.  On waking I recalled this was often a metaphor for new projects then realised it was probably because the book I was reading featured a pregnant girl!

In his Easter message from Canterbury cathedral with a distanced choir, arch Welby said we could go with the light of Jesus and choose a better future for all.  St. Peter’s square eerily empty, The Pope took mass inside the basilica.  Vaccines reached 31.5m and 5.3m had a second dose.  On the eve of a cabinet meeting and a Boris briefing there was speculation on traffic lights for travel and Covid passport trials (at events later in April including the FA cup final and Snooker). Tory MP Nigel Huddle said it may enable venues to open without social distancing but David Daves moaned it wasn’t ‘freedom to have a normal life’ – whatever that was…

Haiga – Delusion

*UK Research and Innovation

References:

i. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

ii My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

Part 55 – Contraindications

“…if the government wants a fast track to undo all of the gains of the present lockdown, this is it”  (Dan Shears)

Contrary Messages

Haiga – Jaded i

In contrast to the previous week, blog posting took up much of Monday leaving little time for anything else.  I attempted yoga in the afternoon but achy and tired, I lay down after ten minutes.  Tuesday was equally boring.

Amid threats of further restrictions and quarantine, Germans infested Majorca on early Easter breaks.  Already locked down in parts of Europe, The Bumbler predicted the third wave would come to the UK (not if you banned travel, you idiot!)  Witty and Valance agreed, unhelpfully saying they regretted the dearth of tests and data in the plague’s early days.  But Prof Ferguson contrarily suggested the wave might not get here because of ‘measures’ and vaccines.  Complaining he was desperate for a haircut, I guffawed: “he’s hardly got any hair!”  The Prof and Minister Helen Waffle both warned of an increased risk from variants against which we had less protection.  USA trials showed AZ gave 100% protection against severe Covid and no risk of thrombosis.  Thinking it was a live trial, I was flummoxed by accusations they hadn’t used the latest data.  Rabid Raab instigated a travel ban and an asset freeze on Chinese officials as punishment for the oppression of minorities.  Was that the same twat who said he’d trade with nations breaching human rights?

A year since the start of lockdown mark 1, a minute’s silence took place and yellow lights were lit across the country.  Dexamethasone research showed the cheap steroid saved 1 million lives worldwide, 22,000 in the UK.  Plans to test all adults twice a week, make vaccines mandatory for staff in elderly care homes and an extension of Coronavirus Laws until October were muted.  On Newsnight, Mike Tildesley of Spi-M said in the short-term we needed better airport testing, travel restrictions and isolation of cases.  He bleated about ‘harms’ caused by mask-wearing -think of the children! Melinda Mills of SPI-B responded she’d rather cover her face than be dead.  Another Kill the Bill demo in Bristol led to 14 more arrests.

For the next 3 days, I felt a bit ill on waking but took Echinacea and ignored it.  On Wednesday’s PMQs, Keir claimed the defence review broke promises for ‘no troop cuts’.  Boris replied “there will be no redundancies” which didn’t mean no cuts thus Keir accused him of ‘Playing with numbers’, said they’d already been reduced by 24,000 since 2010 and there was more to come.

Moves and Counter Moves

Dramatic Lines

Breaking the humdrum, we moved off the sofa to go for a walk early afternoon.  As I’d stupidly put my walking boots away, Phil loitered outside to wait, spooking a hippy’s dog.  Inspired by Walking Friend’s photos of fresh pesto on Facebook, we went to forage in what I called the ‘garlic fields’ in a nearby clough.  Initially, we enjoyed a steady walk, pausing to admire dramatic lines created by the sun behind trees.  The hippy with dog approached.  He kindly attached the dog’s lead for us and we exchanged a few words.  Loose stones made the last upward stretch hard-going.  We rested on a rock before getting to work.  Early in the season, young bright green leaves exuded pungency.  We filled 2 carrier bags then made our way back.  From higher paths, we espied portions of the one alongside the stream and recalled it was once fully navigable.  Tempted to explore, Phil was put off by a hippy woman performing extreme yoga moves by the mill ponds.  Back home, I rinsed the garlic before sitting down with coffee and a snack.  My back hurt and I felt very tired while Phil almost fell asleep on the spot – the flu-like reaction to AZ leaving him fatigued.

Coronavirus infections up, I guessed it was due to the re-opening of schools.  As the EU vaccine row rumbled on, Boris faced the select committee and hinted at tougher rules such as putting France on the travel red list.  The Bumblers’ suggestion that pubs could issue their own Covid Passes was attacked by the CRG, the liberal party, publicans and unions alike as unworkable, chaotic, and discriminatory.  The GMB’s Dan Shears said: “…most under-50s are essentially barred until they get a jab…this will lead to…false certificates, potential violence for pub workers and even a black market for vaccines doses…if the government wants a fast track to undo all of the gains of the present lockdown, this is it.”  At a private meeting, Boris joked the UK had the vaccine because of greed, to immediately add “forget I said that.”  Angela Rayner quipped: “greed certainly explains why tory donors and cronies are laughing all the way to the bank while our nurses get pay cuts.”

As the new travel law went to a parliamentary vote, many complained the move was far too late and a loophole making it legal to go to a second home was dubbed the ‘Stanley Johnson clause’.  Merkel announced a 5 day lockdown in Germany at Easter but u-turned the next day.  No doubt realising the ban on self-catering staycations was ludicrous when thousands of Germans had already flown to Majorca!  An edict from Robert Jerk for public buildings to fly the union flag was issued on the same day that he put Liverpool City Council partly under commission due to mismanagement.  An investigation into property contracts, bribery and corruption implicated mayor Joe Anderson and 4 others.  A girl aged 7 was shot dead by the junta at her home in Myanmar while a fire ripped through Cox’s Bazaar refugee camp, Bangladesh, leaving 15 dead, 45,000 shelter-less and traumatised Rohingya children separated from their families.

Nasty Patel laid out her aims in dealing with incoming asylum-seekers: supporting those in genuine need, deterring illegal entry (by denying them the same entitlements), and making it easier to remove people with ‘no right to be here’.  A stricter definition of what qualified as a ‘well-founded fear of persecution’ made it more difficult to get refugee status.  Shadow home sec Nick Thomas-Symonds responded:  “These changes risk making the situation even harder to access help in the UK, helping criminal gangs escape justice.”  Patel said she’d create safe routes but it was pointed out they’d all been closed down by the nasty tories.  I predicted a counter-move with an influx before the new rules came into force…

The Contrarian

Alan Turing on £50 note

Thursday, I rose from a restless night feeling out of sorts.  Due to a misunderstanding, we had a daft argument.  Although we made up, the altercation left me depressed all day.  Chores done, in the afternoon he went to the shop and I went to the garden to clear my mind.  The secateurs still missing, I hacked at shrubs in the far corner with cut-everything scissors.  A pile of twigs belied the amount of work still to be done.  The elderly neighbour appeared and sat on the bench opposite to chat.  Phil arrived back and joined in whingeing about the state we were in.  I bit my tongue when she reiterated refusal to have the vaccine.  “If someone tells me to do something, I will do the opposite,” she said.  “Well, It’s a prerogative of getting older to be contrary isn’t it?”

A woman I’d seen a couple of times entering next door, introduced herself.  I remarked she seemed nice but it was hard to keep track of who lived in the house or on the street, for that matter.  I hadn’t even noticed an entire family moving from the next terrace.

Contrary to their threats and after issuing a joint statement with the UK government pledging to work together for the benefit of all, the EU stopped short of banning vaccine exports and stressed the importance of global supply chains.  In the last act before the run-up to an election, the Scottish government confirmed a 4% rise for the lowest paid NHS staff.  Unison said Westminster should be ‘shamed’ into doing the same.  Boris hinted this could happen at the pay review, but only mentioned nurses.  BT were to give their key workers £1,000 bonuses as thanks for keeping us connected.  John Lewis announced the closure of 8 more shops, 2 in Yorkshire and Santander were shutting 111 branches by the end of August.  All within 3-5 miles of another branch, unions said the move would preserve jobs and avoid compulsory redundancies.  As the BoE unveiled a new £50 note featuring Alan Turing, Nina on BBC Breakfast said she’d not seen one during the pandemic – as if it was normal pre-Covid to see wads of 50’s.  I’d only ever set eyes on one in my entire life!

A terrible segment on Friday’s BBC Breakfast moved me to complain.  Reporting from the Wrockhardt factory, the annoyingly chirpy and condescending Jayne Gubbins’ piece was misleading, inaccurate and unbalanced.  Amongst other things, she wrongly said they made the AZ vaccine when they actually had a contract to put vaccine in vials, not limited to the AZ version.  The propagandist citing of Boris’s praise of the factory again reminded me of Soviet-era radio Tirana broadcasts lauding tractor production.

Phil disappeared downstairs.  It turned out he’d been trying to detach a broken lens mounting from one of his cameras.  I suggested a couple of possible solutions to which he shook his head.  “It’s fucked,” we agreed, when all of a sudden, it contrarily came free.  Thankfully, the camera still worked but he was narked that it had taken up half a day.  I arranged a ‘walk and talk’ in May with the researcher before setting off for the co-op in a sunny breeze.  A dilemma over two £5 deals was solved by buying both, but I questioned the decision as I subsequently battled to fit it all in the freezer.  Purchases made, I spotted Phil approaching and timed my exit to run into him.  We then ran into our photographer friend and partner.  We shared notes on getting jabs and laughs at the expense of conspiracy theorists.  During a siesta, I was disturbed by shed boy arriving home with music blasting from his car.

ONS figures showed infections in England, Wales and NI were levelling off with a slight rise in Scotland.  Prof Spector, Kings College (and leader of the Covid Symptom Tracker app study) claimed there was ‘no science’ stopping vaccinated people seeing each other – preferably after 2 doses, but probably okay a month after the first.  Rishi Rich urged firms to re-open offices after lockdown, allegedly to stop staff leaving but recalling last summer’s antics, we knew it was to keep Pret and Starbucks in business.  Saying going to offices was better than remote working, I wondered why not meet halfway like Nationwide, allowing staff to work where they liked?  A CIPD survey a week later, found 2/3 of employers favoured hybrid working.  USA daily deaths fell to below 1000 for the first time since November.  7 in 10 over 65’s had been vaccinated with 27m more doses coming.  The Evergreen ship, confusingly named Ever Given, got stuck in the Suez Canal.  Warning it could be there for weeks, diggers trying to dislodge it from mud looked like Tonka toys.

Shifting Through Smoke

Smoky BBQ

Following moderate drinking, I rose on Saturday without a hangover.  Not tempted outdoors in changeable weather, I made wild garlic pesto and salsa verde for later use, wrote a haiga and drafted blogs.  Phil went to look for rooks.  It rained heavily as soon as he left the house which didn’t deter the coffee-cuppers but made him soggy and moody.  In the evening, sharp pains shot up my neck and I worried my head was about to fall off.  A few exercises eased the pain although it was a couple of days until they went altogether.

Contrary to expectations with the start of BST, I was up earlier than usual on Sunday.  On the way to the market, the BBQ ran by the local kebab take-away exuded pungent dark smoke.  Grey clouds wafted over gammons shiftily queuing in front of the stall.

The square busy again, I weaved  through a maze of coffee-cuppers and had to ask someone to step back so I could get to the rustic veg stall.  It was worth the effort to acquire a wealth of muddy produce.  Back home, I dodged round 2 hippy women hovering at the threshold next door – more inhabitants or just visiting?  Settling down to watch telly, I caught a bit of ice skating which was nice, if odd.  In place of an audience, mask-wearing officials stood in lines behind the barrier.  Very tired at bedtime due to the early start, I slept well.

When asked if there could be more national lockdowns on The Marr, Oliver Dowdy said he wasn’t ruling anything out. Mark Woodhouse of SPI-M warned that June normality was ‘over-optimistic’.  People vaccinated reached 30m of whom 3.5m had a second dose.  Hospital admissions were the lowest they’d been for 6 months and a Vivaldi study found a 62% drop in care home cases within 5 weeks of a jab.  Hauliers coming into GB would be tested while an experimental gig in Barcelona involved revellers taking tests and wearing masks but not physical distancing.  As Merkel lost support, Phil informed me Adolf Von Der Leyen had been in a bunker bubble for the last 6 months.  “it’s all a bit Downfall!” I remarked:*  Kill the Bill protests took place across the UK but the Bradford demo was an idiotic anti-lockdown effort.  9 cops were injured and 13 arrested.  The Myanmar junta had a party after killing 114 civilians, including a 5 year old, prompting chiefs of staff to write that the duty of the military was to protect citizens, not attack them.

*Downfall – A much-parodied film detailing the last days of Adolf Hitler in his bunker

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com